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Tim  Southern  Appalachian® 

L  Bib;    i  :;,rapb.y  ;  and   Guide   to  Studies 


jfAURM. 


LIBRARY 
WEST  VIRGINIA  | 
UNIVERSITY 


s°Vthern  Add*;,,  ^  L,b'"aries 


aprm 


West  Virginia  University  Library 
This  book  is  due  on  the  date  indicated  below. 


'WW 


Hfitt 


The  Southern  Appalachians 

A  Bibliography  and  Guide  to  Studies 


By 
Robert  F.  Munn 


WEST  VIRGINIA   UNIVERSITY   LIBRARY 

MORGANTOWN 

1961 


APPAL.  RM. 

z/as 
2- 


Library 
West  Virginia  University 


The  'Mountain  People'  of  Appalachia  are 
ci-devant  heirs  of  Western  Civilization  who 
have  relapsed  into  barbarism  under  the  de- 
pressing effect  of  a  challenge  which  has  been 
inordinately  severe. 

Arnold  J.  Toynbee,  A  Study  of  History 
Vol.  II  p.  312 

The  Southern  Mountaineer  is,  all  in  all, 
the  most  admirable  type  of  American.  School- 
ed to  simplicity,  not  lacking  in  vigor,  he 
keeps  in  great  degree  the  powers  that  pre- 
serve nations. 

Arthur  W.  Spaulding,   The  Men   of  the 
Mountains  p.  3. 


ii 


Table  of  Contents 


Introduction      1 

Abbreviations     5 

General    References    7 

Social  &  Economic  Studies  of  Cities,  Counties  &  Areas   13 

Local   Government    21 

Family   Life.    Children    22 

Intelligence  &  Aptitude    25 

Public  Health.  Nutrition    27 

The  Mountaineer  in  the  City   30 

Population   Changes.  Migration    32 

Coal   Mines  &  Miners    36 

Health    37 

Labor   Relations    38 

Life  in  the  Coal  Country   40 

Economics      42 

Miscellaneous     43 

Religion     45 

Negroes,  Indians  &  Other  Minority  Groups   49 

Education    51 

Attendance    51 

Educational    Surveys    52 

Finance  &  Administration    54 


History     5 


>.> 


Negro     57 

Private,  Church  &  Folk  Schools    58 

School  &   Community    63 

Teachers    64 

Libraries     6"> 

Miscellaneous     66 

Agriculture      71 

Forestry      76 

Folklore,    Customs     78 

Music    80 

Speech     82 

Crafts      83 

Miscellaneous     85 

Index    92 


111 


97993Q 


Introduction 

THe  creation  of  an  extensive  literature  on  the  Southern  Appalachians 
has  been  a  comparatively  recent  development.  Horace  Kephart, 
one  of  the  first  important  students  of  the  region,  complained  that  in  1905 
he  could  not  discover  "so  much  as  a  magazine  article,  written  within 
this  generation,  that  described  the  land  and  its  people.  .  .  Had  I  been 
going  to  Teneriffe  or  Timbuctu,  the  libraries  would  have  furnished 
information  a-plenty;  but  about  this  housetop  of  eastern  America  they 
were  strangely  silent,  it  was  terra  incognita."1  This  situation  changed 
rapidly  during  the  next   thirty  years.    Books,   articles,   pamphlets   and 

official  documents  appeared  by  the  hundred.  By  1935  Everett  Edwards 
was  able  to  locate  some  830  references  to  the  Southern  Appalachians. 
A  quarter  of  a  century  later  the  number  reaches  into  the  thousands. 

The  quality  of  this  writing  has  in  no  sense  increased  with  the 
quantity.  Indeed,  a  strong  case  can  be  made  for  the  statement  that 
more  nonsense  has  been  written  about  the  Southern  Appalachians  than 
any  comparable  area  in  the  United  States.  The  nature  of  this  literature 
has  been  remarkably  consistent.  As  early  as  1926  Florence  Ridgway 
detected  a  pattern  which  has  remained  valid  to  this  date.-  There  were, 
she  felt,  three  main  types  of  authors  writing  about  the  Southern  Appa- 
lachians. The  first,  the  Exploiters,  have  been  in  the  majority,  and  have 
largely  created  the  popular  stereotype  of  the  shiftless,  ignorant  and  law- 
less mountaineer.  The  second  major  group  is  made  up  of  the  Enthu- 
siasts. Many  of  these  have  been  almost  painfully  well-intentioned,  but 
have  often  fallen  victim  to  their  own  causes  and  panaceas.  In  this  group 
one  may  also  place  the  innumerable  romanticizers  of  the  area— those 
whom  John  Day  characterized  as  "quaintness  mongers"  and  "ballad 
pushers."  The  third  group,  still  regrettably  small,  is  composed  of  those 
who  write  with  insight  and  accuracy. 

A  review  of  the  literature  suggests  that  both  public  and  academic 
interest  in  the  Southern  Appalachians  has  been  quite  erratic.  Long 
periods  of  more  or  less  complete  indifference  have  been  broken  by  often 
short-lived  campaigns  to  "do  something"  for  or  to  the  mountaineer. 
Throughout  the  Nineteenth  Century  and  during  the  first  decades  of  this 
century  serious  and  sustained  interest  in  the  area  was  confined  largely 
to  religious  and  philanthropic  groups.  This  was  the  great  era  of  the 
settlement  school  and  the  missionary.  The  1930's  saw  a  marked  change 
in  emphasis.    Political  action  and  massive  governmental  aid  began  to  be 

]Horace   Kephart,   Our  Southern  Highlanders    (New   York:    Outing   Publishing   Company, 
1913),   p.   13. 

-Florence  H.   Ridgway,   "Friendly   books   for  quiet   nooks,"   ML&W  Jl   1926   p.    11. 

1 


viewed  as  the  only  solution.  During  the  early  1930's  the  Southern  Ap 
paiachians  were  "discovered"  by  the  American  Left.  There  developed  a 
vast  and  generally  polemical  literature  describing  the  region's  wretched 
social  and  economic  conditions.  This  interest  waned  almost  as  suddenly 
as  it  had  arisen,  and  a  marked  decline  in  the  volume  of  writing  about 
the  Southern  Appalachians  was  evident  during  the  1940's  and  the  early 
1950's. 

The  current  revival  of  interest  in  the  Southern  Appalachians  differs 
from  previous  ones  in  at  least  two  important  respects.  It  is  centered 
largely  in  the  universities,  and  those  conducting  the  studies  are  trained 
in  research.  Equally  important,  there  is  a  general  recognition  that  both 
sustained  and  well-coordinated  efforts  are  required. 

The  literature  of  the  Southern  Appalachians  is  widely  scattered. 
Only  one  journal,  Mountain  Life  and  Work,  has  been  devoted  entirely 
to  the  area.  This  journal  has  been  able  to  publish  but  a  small  fraction 
of  even  the  most  significant  studies.  The  result  has  been  that  contribu- 
tions of  great  importance  are  to  be  found  in  everything  from  the 
Atlantic  Monthly  to  Eugenics  Quarterly.  This  scattering  of  the  literature 
has  increased  as  scholars  representing  the  various  academic  disciplines 
have  grown  interested  in  the  region  and  its  problems.  It  is  now  common 
to  find  articles  on  the  Southern  Appalachians  in  journals  devoted  to 
economics,  medicine,  sociology,  psychiatry,  and  history,  to  mention  only 
the  most  obvious.  The  growing  interest  among  professional  scholars  has 
also  given  rise  to  a  great  increase  in  the  number  of  dissertations  and 
theses  on  the  area.  In  short,  the  literature  has  become  vast  and  almost 
wildly  diffused. 

The  first,  and  for  that  matter  probably  the  last,  effort  to  compile 
a  bibliography  of  everything  ever  written  about  the  Southern  Appala- 
chians was  undertaken  by  Everett  E.  Edwards.  In  1935  he  published 
References  on  the  Mountaineers  of  the  Southern  Appalachians.  It  ap- 
peared as  Number  Twenty-eight  in  the  Bibliographical  Contributions 
of  the  United  States  Department  of  Agriculture  Library.  Comprehen- 
siveness was  the  goal,  and  no  effort  was  made  at  evaluation.  The  work 
has  long  stood  as  a  landmark,  and  is  still  of  vital  importance  to  those 
seriously  interested  in  the  region.  Unfortunately,  it  is  long  since  out 
of  print  and  now  almost  unobtainable. 

The  need  for  a  new  bibliography  of  the  Southern  Appalachians  has 
become  increasingly  evident  during  the  past  few  years.  The  region  has 
become  of  great  and  growing  interest  to  scholars.  Private  foundations, 
governmental  agencies  and  universities  are  now  spending  large  sums 
for  research  on  the  social  and  economic  problems  of  the  area.    Several 


major  research   projects   are  now  being  conducted;    more   are   certain 
to  follow. 

It  is  imperative  that  this  research  be  carried  out  as  efficiently  and 
intelligently  as  possible.  Yet  the  wildly  scattered  nature  of  the  literature 
militates  against  this.  Even  the  most  conscientious  scholar  finds  it  in- 
creasingly difficult  to  keep  abreast  of  the  literature  in  his  own  field. 
It  is  generally  quite  impossible  for  him  to  follow  that  of  other  disciplines. 
Thus,  it  is  idle  to  expect  the  sociologist  to  scan  medical  journals  or  the 
economist  to  master  the  literature  of  psychology.  And  yet,  all  agree  that 
any  fruitful  study  of  the  problems  of  the  Southern  Appalachians  must 
utilize  a  cross-disciplinary  approach. 

The  chief  purpose  of  this  work  is  to  aid  in  such  cross-disciplinary 
research.  The  principal  emphasis  has  been  placed  on  the  social  sciences 
and  education.  Geological  and  botanical  studies,  the  scientific  aspects 
of  agriculture  and  forestry  and  fictional  works  have  been  excluded,  as 
have  references  to  the  culturally  related  Ozark  Mountain  region.  Em- 
phasis has  been  placed  on  works  appearing  since  1935.  However,  titles 
published  prior  to  that  date  have  been  included  if  they  are  among  the 
classics  of  the  field  or  if  they  were  overlooked  by  Edwards.  While  it 
often  seemed  best  to  err  on  the  side  of  over-inclusion,  a  vast  amount  of 
ephemeral  material  has  been  excluded.  A  special  effort  has  been  made 
to  include  as  many  pertinent  dissertations  and  theses  as  possible.  Many 
of  these,  especially  theses,  are  almost  impossible  to  locate  through  the 
conventional  bibliographic  sources.  Every  effort  has  been  made  to  in- 
clude (1)  all  titles  of  real  significance  and  (2)  works  whose  bibliographies 
will  serve  as  a  guide  to  those  interested  in  a  specific  area  or  problem. 

Whether  or  not  to  provide  abstracts  or  annotations  presented  a 
major  problem.  In  many  cases,  they  can  be  of  undoubted  value.  On 
the  other  hand,  it  must  be  recognized  that  historical  and  descriptive 
accounts,  unlike  articles  in  chemistry  or  physics,  or  even  psychology,  do 
not  really  lend  themselves  to  abstracting.  Unless  the  abstract  or  annota- 
tion is  of  prohibitive  length,  there  is  danger  that  it  may  do  violence  to 
the  original.  A  compromise  seemed  the  only  answer.  Annotations  have 
been  provided  for  all  entries  if  the  title  of  the  book  or  article  does  not 
make  obvious  the  subject  covered.  They  have  also  been  provided  if,  in 
the  opinion  of  the  compiler,  they  would  be  more  likely  to  help  than 
mislead  the  user. 

All  of  the  major  and  many  of  the  smaller  academic  libraries  in 
the  Southern  Appalachian  area  were  visited  in  an  attempt  to  locate 
unreported  titles.  No  one  library  can  be  said  to  have  the  collection  on 
the  Southern  Appalachians.   Duke  and  the  University  of  North  Carolina 

3 


have  perhaps  the  best  collections  on  the  South  in  general.  Each  of 
the  state  universities  is  strong  in  material  relating  to  its  particular  state. 
At  the  moment,  the  most  comprehensive  collections  on  the  Southern 
Appalachians  per  se  appear  to  be  located  at  Berea  College  and  West 
Virginia  University.  Berea  is  particularly  strong  in  the  arts,  literature, 
and  poetry  of  the  region;  West  Virginia,  on  the  other  hand,  has  con- 
centrated on  the  area's  history,  sociology,  educational  and  economic 
problems. 

Every  bibliographer  lives  not  in  the  fear  but  in  the  certain  know- 
ledge that  he  has  overlooked  titles  of  importance.  It  will  be  appreciated 
if  those  discovering  such  omissions  will  notify  the  compiler.  It  is  hoped 
that  an  annual  or  semi-annual  supplement  can  be  produced  and  dis- 
tributed to  scholars  interested  in  this  area. 

Several  individuals  have  contributed  greatly  to  whatever  utility  this 
work  may  have.  The  help  of  Miss  Lorise  C.  Boger  and  Mrs.  Jack 
Graybeal  merit  special  thanks.  Needless  to  say,  all  sins  of  omission  and 
commission  are  those  of  the  compiler. 


Abbreviations 


Ag 

August 

Ap 

April 

D 

December 

ETSC 

East  Tennessee  State  College 

F 

February 

Ja 

January 

Je 

June 

Jl 

July 

ML&W 

Mountain  Life  and  Work 

Mr 

March 

Mv 

May 

n' 

November 

o 

October 

PMLA 

Modern  Language  Association,  Publications 

S 

September 

USDA 

United  States  Department  of  Agriculture 

VPI 

Virginia  Polytechnic  Institute 

General  References 


1.  ARMENTROUT,  WALTER   W. 

Employment  and  underemployment  of  rural  people  in  the  Appalachian  area. 
Journal  of  Farm  Economics  41:1076-83    1959. 

1A.    ARMSTRONG,  ANNE  W. 

The  southern  mountaineers.  Yale  Review  24:539-54  1935. 

Analysis  of  mountaineer  character  and  folkways.  Author  feels  that  Prohibi- 
tion, with  the  opportunity  to  make  money  by  moonshining,  speeded  the 
demoralization  of  the  mountaineers. 

2.  BEERS,  HOWARD  W. 

The  changing  highlands.  MIMV  Eall   1958  5-7. 

A  summary  of  the  conclusions  of  the  1958  annual  conference  of  the  Council 
of  the  Southern  Mountains. 

3.  BEERS,  HOWARD  W. 

Highland  society  in  transition.  ML&W  Spring  1946  1-3. 

An  analysis  of  the  validity  of  the  "folk  society"  view  of  the  liighlanders  of 
Eastern  Kentucky. 

4.  BOWMAN,  ELIZABETH  S. 

Land  of  high   horizons.   Kingsport,  Tennessee:    Southern   Publishers,   1938,  212p. 

"My  aim  has  been  to  present  the  Smokies  as  a  whole  with  their  alluring  charm 
rather   than  in   full  detail." 

5.  CALDWELL,  MARY  F. 

Change  comes  to  the  Appalachian  mountaineer.  Current  History  31:961-67  1930. 

^  6.    CALLAHAN,  NORTH 

The  Smoky  Mountain  country.  New  York:  Duell,  Sloan,  &  Pearce,  1952.  257p. 
(American  Folkways  series.) 

7.  CAMPBELL,  JOHN  C. 

The  Southern  highlander  and  his  homeland.  New  York:  Russell  Sage  Foun- 
dation, 1921.  405p. 

A  pioneer  work.  Perhaps  the  first  major  study  which  could  be  described  as 
being  of  lasting  importance.  Bibliography   375-89. 

8.  COMBS,  JOSIAH  H. 

The  Kentucky  liighlanders  from  a  native  mountaineers  viewpoint.  Lexington: 
J.  L.  Hichardson,  1913.  44p. 

9.  CONFERENCE   OF   SOUTHERN    MOUNTAIN    WORKERS 

The  Southern  Highlands;  an  inquiry  into  their  needs,  and  qualifications  desired 
in  church,  educational  and  social  service  workers  in  the  mountain  country. 
Ashville:   Inland  Press,  1915.  66p. 

10.  COUCH,   W.   T.,   editor 

Culture  in  the  south.  Chapel  Hill:  University  of  North  Carolina  Press,  1934. 
711p. 

See  especially  Chapter  19  on  'Appalachian  America." 

11.  COUNCIL   OF   THE  SOUTHERN    MOUNTAINS 

Mass  meeting  study  of  the  Appalachian  South.  (Afternoon  Program  ...  of 
the  46th  Annual  Conference  of  the  Council  of  the  Southern  Mountains.)  Bcrea: 
The  Council,  1958.  41p.  proc. 

12.  DANIELS,  FREEMAN  J. 

The  mountain  people  of  Virginia;  their  nature  and  their  needs.  Thesis.  Uni- 
versity of  Virginia.  1925. 


13.  DAVIDSON,  DONALD 

The  Tennessee.  New  York:  Rinehart,  1946-48.  vl.  The  old  river,  frontier  to 
secession.  333p.  v2.  The  new  river,  Civil  War  to  TVA.  377p.  (Rivers  of  America 
Series.) 

14.  DAVIS,  D.  H. 

Study  of  the  succession  of  human  activities  in  the  Kentucky  mountains,  a 
dissected  highland  area.   Journal  of  Geography  29:85-100  1930. 

M5.    DAY,  JOHN  F. 

Bloody  ground.  New  York:   Doubleday,   1941.  324p. 

A  description  of  life  in  the  mountain  counties  of  eastern  Kentucky.  A  well- 
written  and  often  penetrating  account.  The  author  is  violently  opposed  to  the 
"quaintness  mongers"  and  "ballad  pushers"  who  have,  he  feels,  presented  a 
wildly  over-romanticized  picture  of  mountain  life. 

15A.    DUNCAN,  HANNIBAL 

The  southern  highlanders.  journal  of  Applied  Sociology  10:556-61    1926. 

"The  Highlanders  remain  a  submerged  group  without  power  in  state  or 
nation." 

^16.    DYKEMAN,   WILMA 

The  French  Broad.  New  York:  Rinehart,  1955.  371p.  (Rivers  of  America  series.) 
Bibliography  349-56. 

17.  EDWARDS,  A.  S.  &  LESLIE  JONES 

An  experimental  field  of  study  of  North  Georgia  mountaineers.  Journal  of 
of  Social  Psychology  9:317-333  1938. 

"The  object  of  this  study  was  to  gather  all  information  possible  ...  by  means 
of  objective  tests,  observation,  and  records  of  behavior  and  language." 

18.  ESTABROOK,  ARTHUR  H. 

Is  there  a  mountain  problem.  ML&W  Jl   1928  5-13 +  . 

18A.    FOX,  JOHN   JR. 

The  southern  mountaineer.  Scribners  29:387-92,  557-70  1901. 

19.  GIFFIN,  ROSCOE 

Down  in  the  valley.  ML&W  Spring  1953  39-46;  Summer  1953  33-40;  Autumn  1953 
38-46. 

A  series  of  three  articles  by  the  Head  of  the  Department  of  Sociology  at  Berea 
College.  Series  is  based  on  a  socio-economic  survey  of  an  isolated  school  dis- 
trict in  the  mountainous  section  of  Kentucky. 

20.  GRATTAN,  C.  HARTLEY 

Trouble  in  the  hills.  Scribncr's  Magazine.  98:290-94  1935. 

"The  pattern  of  life  supposed  to  be  characteristic  in  the  Southern  It i  11  country 
was  established  by  writers  of  fiction."  Author  discusses  the  true  situation 
"which  is  only  describablc  as  appalling." 

21.  GRAY,  L.  C.  and  others 

Economic  and  social  problems  and  conditions  of  the  Southern  Appalachians. 
Washington:    GPO,    1935.    184p.   proc.     (USDA    Miscellaneous    Publication    205.) 

22.  GRAY,  WAYNE  T. 

Mountain  dilemmas:  a  study  in  mountain  attitudes.  ML&W  Ap  1936  1-7. 

A  discussion  of  the  attitudes  of  640  mountain  families  toward  education,  health, 
religion  and  other  socio-economic  problems. 

22  A.    GRAYBEAL.   DAVID   M. 

Cultural  change  in  the  Appalachian  South.  ML&W  35:1  6-10.  1959. 

22B.    GROSSMAN,  D.  A.  AND  MELVIN  R.  LEVIN 

The  Appalachion  region;  a  preliminary  analysis  of  economic  and  population 
trends  in  an  eleven  state  problem  area.  Atlanta:  Council  of  State  Governments, 
1960.  31p.   (Issued  also  by  the  Maryland  Department  of  Economic  Development.) 

8 


23.  HANEY,  WILLIAM  H. 

The  Mountain  people  of  Kentucky.  Cincinnati:  R.  Clarke,  190G.  196p. 

"It  is  the  purpose  of  this  book  to  show  existing  conditions  in  the  mountains 
of  Kentucky  and  the  attitude  of  the  people  of  this  region  toward  the  improve- 
ment of  the  conditions  affecting  life  and  character." 

24.  HARDIN,  RECTOR  R. 

Decentralization  and  southern  Appalachia.  ML&W  Spring  1946  7-9  +  . 
Author  advances   the  idea   that    the  Appalachian  region    may    profit    by    the   in- 
dustrial decentralization  made  necessary  by  the  development  of  the  atomic  bomb. 

23.    JOHNSON,   CHARLES   S. 

Statistical  atlas  of  southern  counties.  Chapel  Hill:  University  of  North  Carolina 
Press,  1941.  355p. 

"A  listing  and  analysis  of  socio-economic  indices  of  1 1 0-4  southern  counties." 
States  covered:  Alabama,  Arkansas,  Florida,  Georgia,  Kentucky,  Louisiana.  Mary- 
land, Mississippi,  North  Carolina,  South  Carolina,  Tennessee,  Texas,  and  Vir- 
ginia. An  invaluable  source  of  information  for  the  area  covered.  Bibliography 
301-355. 

2G.    JONES,  OLEONA 

My  colorful  days.  Boston:   Chrostopher,  1940.   H9p. 

"Stories  based  on  the  author's  experience  as  community  worker  among  the 
underprivileged  white  people  of  the  southern  Appalachians." 

27.  KEPHART,  HORACE 

Our  southern  highlanders.  New  York:   Outing  Publishing  Co.,  1913.  395p. 

A  popularly-written  account   of  travels  and   life  in   the  area.    One  of  the   first 

important    such. 

28.  KERNODLE,  WAYNE 

Last  of  the  rugged  individualists.  Harpers,  220  Ja  19G0.  46-51. 

A  "farewell  portrait"  of  the  rapidly-vanishing  mountaineer. 

29.  LANMAN,  CHARLES 

Letters  from   the  Allegheny  Mountains.  New  York:    1894.   198p. 

Account  of  author's  travels  through  northern  Georgia,  western  North  Carolina, 
eastern  Tennessee,  and  the  valley  of  Virginia.  An  interesting  example  of  an 
early  account  of  the  Southern  Appalachians. 

s30.    MASON,   ROBERT  L. 

The  lure  of  the  Great  Smokies.  Boston:  Houghton  Mifflin  Company.  1927.  320p. 

31.  McCLURE,  VIRGINIA  C. 

The  settlement  of  the  Kentucky  Appalachian  highlands.  Ph.D.  University  of 
Kentucky.   1933. 

32.  MARSCHNER,  FRANCIS  J. 

Rural  population  density  in  the  Southern  Appalachians.  Washington:  GPO, 
1940.   18p.   USDA.  Miscellaneous  Publication   367). 

33.  MATTHEWS,  MATTHEW  TAYLOR 

Experience  worlds  of  mountain  people.  New  York:  Columbia  University  Press, 
1937.  210p.    (Teachers   College  Contributions   to   Education    700.) 

34.  MILES,  EMMA  B. 

The  spirit  of  the  mountains.  New  York:  J.  Pott  &  Co.,  1905.  200p. 

35.  MONTGOMERY,  JAMES  E. 

Three  Southern  Appalachian  communities;  an  analysis  of  cultural  variables. 
Rural  Sociology    14:138-148.   1949. 


36.  MONTGOMERY,  JAMES  E. 

Three  Appalachian  communities;  cultural  differences  as  they  affect  levels  of 
living  and  population  pressures.  Ph.D.  Vanderbilt.   1944. 

"The  hypothesis  is  that  the  number  of  people  who  can  be  supported  at  a 
given  level  of  living  upon  a  given  initial  natural  resource  base  is  affected  by 
cultural  differentials  which  influence  the  uses  that  are  made  of  these  re- 
sources." Communities  studied  were  in  Grundy,  Cumberland  and  Sevier  Coun- 
ties, Tennessee. 

37.  MORLEY,  MARGARET 

The  Carolina  mountains.  Boston:   Houghton  Mifflin  Co.,  1913.  397p. 

An  interesting   if  somewhat   romantic   account   of   travel    throughout    the   area. 

37A.    NIXON,  HERMAN  C. 

Lower  Piedmont  country.  New  York:  Duell,  Sloan  &  Pearce,  194G.  244p. 

*  38.    NIXON,  HERMAN  C. 

Possum   Trot.  Norman:    University  of   Oklahoma   Press,    1941.    192p. 

An  informal  account  of  "a  little  neighborhood  in  the  upcountry  of  the  South." 

39.  ODUM,  HOWARD  W. 

Southern  regions  of  the  United  States.  Chapel  Hill:  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina Press.  1936.  664p. 

40.  PEARSALL,  MARION 

Little  Smoky  Ridge;  the  natural  history  of  a  Southern  Appalachian  neighbor- 
hood.   University,  Alabama:   University  of  Alabama  Press,  1959.  205p. 

A  description  of  life  in  the  mountains  of  East  Tennessee  by  a  trained  sociologist. 
A  significant  contribution.    Bibliography  191-205. 

41.  PEATTIE,  RODERICK 

The  Great  Smokies  and  the  Blue  Ridge;  the  story  of  the  Southern  Appa- 
lachians. New  York:  Vanguard,   1943.  372p. 

A  well-written  account  designed  for  the  non-specialist. 

42.  RAINE,  JAMES  W. 

The  land  of  saddle-bags.  New  York:  Council  of  Women  for  Home  Missions, 
1924.  260p. 

An  interesting  and  well-written  if  somewhat  defensive  account  of  life  in  the 
Southern  Appalachians. 

43.  SEMPLE,  ELLEN  C. 

The  Anglo-Saxons  of  the  Kentucky  Mountains;   a  study  in  anthropogeography. 

Geographic  Journal  17:588-623  1901. 

One  of  the  first  studies  of  the  subject  by  a  world-famous  scholar. 

V44.    SHEPPARD,  MURIEL 

Cabins  in   the  laurel.   Chapel   Hill:    University   of   North   Carolina   Press,    1935. 

313p. 

A  popular  account  of  the  history  and  present  conditions  of  the  people  of  the 

Toe  River  Valley  area.    Numerous  photographs. 

45.    SHERMAN,  MANDEL  &  THOMAS  R.  HENRY 
Hollow  folk.  New  York:  Crowell,  1933.  215p. 

"The  material  which  forms  the  basis  of  this  story  of  mountain  people  was 
obtained  from  a  study  made  during  a  period  of  two  years.  Two  psychologists 
and  their  assistants,  a  nutritionist,  a  psychiatrist  and  sociologist  took  part  in 
the  investigations."  Study  centered  in  an  isolated  area  in  the  Blue  Ridge 
Mountains  of  Virginia. 

10 


46.  SPAULDING,  ARTHUR  W. 

The  men   of  the   mountains.   Nashville:    Southern    Publishing   Co.,    1915.    320p. 

A  highly  impressionistic  account  of  the  history  and  present  conditions  plus  sug- 
gestions for  the  future.  Very  "pro-Mountain."  "The  Southern  mountaineer 
is,  all  in  all,  the  most  admirable  type  of  American.  Schooled  to  simplicity, 
not  lacking  in  vigor,  he  keeps  in  great  degree  the  powers  that  preserve  nations, 
powers  that  too  many  of  our  people  are  losing  in  the  nerve-racking  strain  of 
our  unexampled  age." 

47.  STUART,  JESSE 

America's  last  carbon  copy.  Saturday  Revieiv.  40  D  28,  1957  5-7  +  . 

"My  first  short  stories  and  first  four  books,  published  from  twenty  to  fifteen 
years  ago,  are  dated  now.    This  is  how  fast  life  is  changing  for  us." 

48.  THOMAS,  JEAN 

Big  Sandy.  New  York:  Holt,  1940.  302p. 

"One  purpose  of  this  book  is  to  show  the  mountain  people  as  they  are  rather 
than  as  romantic  fiction  would  sometimes  have  them."  An  account  of 
life  in  the  Big  Sandy  River  district  of  eastern  Kentucky. 

49.  THOMAS,  JEAN 

The  Blue  Ridge  Country.  New  York:  Duell,  Sloan  &  Pearce,  1942,  338p.  (In 
the  American  Folkways  Series.) 

49A.    THORNBURGH,  LAURA 

The  Great  Smoky  Mountains.  Knoxville:  University  of  Tennessee  Press.  Rev. 
&  enl.  ed,  1956.   180p. 

50.  UNITED  STATES  CONGRESS. 

Senate.  Special  Committee  on  Unemployment  Problems.  86th  Congress,  First 
Session.  Hearings.  1959.  Part  5:  Harlan  and  Pikesville,  Kentucky,  New  Orleans 
and  Baton  Rouge,  Louisiana.  Part  6:  Welch,  Beckley,  Fayetteville  and  Wheeling, 
West  Virginia. 

Committee  held  hearings  in  many  of  the  chronic  labor  surplus  areas.  The 
Southern  Appalachians  from  one  of  the  most  important  of  these.  The  Commit- 
tee took  much  testimony  from  experts  and  residents  of  the  area.  A  most  impor- 
tant work. 

51.  UNITED  STATES  DEPARTMENT  OF  AGRICULTURE 

Economic  and  social  problems  and   conditions   of   the   Southern    Appalachians. 
Washington:    GPO,   1935.   184p.   USDA.   Miscellaneous   Publication   205.) 
Contains  a  wealth  of  statistical  information. 

52.  VANCE,  RUPERT  B. 

Human  geography  of  the  South;  a  study  in  regional  resources  and  human 
adequacy.    Chapel  Hill:   University  of  North  Carolina  Press,   1932.  596p. 

53.  WEATHERFORD,  WILLIS  D. 

Pioneers  of  destiny;  the  romance  of  the  Appalachian  people.  Birmingham, 
Alabama:  Vulcan  Press,  1955.  73p. 

"This  small  monograph  is  written  as  a  part  of  the  Centennial  celebration 
material  of  Berea  College  ...  It  is  a  brief  outline  of  the  movements  of  people, 
particularly   the  Scotch   Higlanders  and  the  Scotch-Irish   into  this   region   .   .    . 

54.  WHEELER,  LESTER  R. 

A  study  of  the  remote  mountain  people  of  the  Tennessee  Valley.  Journal  of 
the  Tennessee  Academy  of  Science.  10:33-36.  1935. 

55.  WHITAKER,  FESS 

History  of  Corporal  Fess  Whitaker.  Louisville:  Standard  Printing  Co.,  1918.  152p. 
A  somewhat  rambling,  largely  autobiographical  account  of  life  in  the  back 
country  of  Letcher  County,  Kentucky. 

11 


56.  WHITE,  EDWIN   E. 

Highland  heritage;  the  southern  mountains  and  the  nation.  New  York:  Friend- 
ship Press.  1935.  193p. 

A  study  of  the  southern  mountains  by  a  Presbyterian  minister  who  served  many 
years  in   the  Tennessee   mountains. 

57.  WILSON,  SAMUEL  T. 

The  Southern  mountaineers.  New  York:  Presbyterian  Home  Missions,  1914.  202p. 

The  fourth  edition  (1914)  incorporates  in  it  the  results  of  the  census  of  1910. 
Wilson  was  President  of  Maryville  College  and  a  Presbyterian  divine.  Most 
useful  for  discussion  of  religious  and  educational  problems.  Not,  by  and  large, 
a  work  showing  great  insight. 

58.  WITHINGTON,  ALFREDA 

Mountain  doctor.  Atlantic  Monthly   150:257-67,  4G9-77,  768-74.   1932. 

Account  of  Dr.  Withington's  work  in  a  remote  area  of  the  Kentucky  mountains. 

59.  WOODY,  ROBERT  H. 

Cataloochee  homecoming.  South  Atlantic  Quarterly  49:8-17.  1950. 
A  protest  against  the  tendency  of  government  to  declare  people  "submarginal" 
and  to  insist  "that  the  lot  of  these  contented  people  could  and  should  be  im- 
proved elsewhere."  Cataloochee  is  a  mountain   hamlet   in  western  North   Caro- 
lina. 


12 


Social  and  Economic  Studies  of  Cities, 
Counties  and  Areas 

60.  ADAMS,  WILLIAM   H.  Jr. 

An  economic  and  social  survey  of  Bedford  County.  Charlottesville,  1944,  84p. 
(University  of  Virginia  Record.  Extension  Series.  XVIII  No.  2.) 

61.  ALEXANDER,  FRANK  D.  &  ROBERT  E.  GALLOWAY 

Salient  features  of  social  organization  in  a  typical  county  of  the  general  and 
self-sufficing  farm  region.  Rural  Sociology   12:395-405    1947. 

"The  material  for  this  paper  was  taken  from  a  study  of  social  organization  in 
Rabun  County,  Georgia." 

f>2.    ALLRED,  CHARLES  E.  AND  OTHERS 

Social  factors  associated  with  land  class  in  Overton  County,  Tennessee.  Tennes- 
see Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Rural  Research  Series.  Monograph  105, 
1940.  36p. 

63.  ALMON,  GLOPPER 

Origins  and  relation  to  agriculture  of  industrial  workers  in  Kingsport,  Tennes- 
see. Journal  of  Faun  Economics  38:828-36.   1956. 

64.  AVAILABILITY  for  employment  of  rural  people  in  the  Upper  Monongahela 
Valley,  West  Virginia.  West  Virginia  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin 
391,   1956.  43p. 

65.  BAUDER,  WARD  W. 

Ojectives  and  activities  of  special-interest  organizations  in  Kentucky.  Kentucky 
Agricultural  Experiment  Station.    Bulletin  639,  1956.  43p. 

66.  BEERS,  HOWARD  W.  AND  CATHERINE  P.   HEFLIN 

People  and  resources  in  eastern  Kentucky.  Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment 
Station.  Bulletin  500,  1947.  59p. 

67.  BONSER,  HOWARD  J. 

Better  homemaking  practices  through  rural  community   organizations.   Tennes- 
see Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  287,  1958.  25p. 
Study  of  rural  community  organizations  in  East  Tennessee. 

68.  BONSER,  HOWARD  J. 

Local  leadership  in  rural  communities  of  Cumberland  County,  Tennessee. 
Tennessee  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Rural  Research  Series.  Mono- 
graph 144,  1942.  79p. 

69.  BONSER,  HOWARD  J.  &  HERBERT  BUTT 

Selective  participation  of  farmers  and  their  wives  in  rural  organization.  Ten- 
nessee Agricultural  Experiment  Station.    Bulletin  257,   1957.  23p. 

A  study  of  participation  of  farmers  and  their  wives  in  organized  groups  in  four 
rural  East  Tennessee  communities. 

70.  BORAH,  LEO  ARTHUR 

Home  folk  around  historic  Cumberland  Gap.  National  Geographic  84:714-68. 
1943. 

71.  BRENDER,  ERNEST  V.  AND  ELLIOTT  MERRICK 

Early  settlement  and  land  use  in  the  present  Toccoa  Experimental  Forest. 
Scientific  Monthly  71:318-325.   1950. 

"Story  of  the  development,  peak,  decline  and  final  abandonment  of  an  Appa- 
lachian wilderness  community  in  the  mountains  of  north  Georgia." 

72.  BROOKS,  WILLIAM  E. 

Arthurdale,  a  new  chance.  Atlantic  Monthly  158:196-204.  1935. 

Description  of  the  resettlement  project  in  Preston  County,  West  Virginia. 

13 


73.  BROWN,  JAMES  S. 

Social  class,  intermarriage,  and  church  membership  in  a   Kentucky  community. 
American  Journal  of  Sociology  57:232-42.    1951. 

74.  BRYANT,  WILLIAM  A. 

A  brief  survey  of  industrial   plants  in   Kingsport,  Tennessee,  with  emphasis  on 
the  geographic  loation  of  the  industrial  worker.  Thesis.  ETSC.   1951. 

75.  BURMAN,  BEN   LUCIEN 

That  good  old  mountain  justice.  Colliers  132  Jl  25,  1953.  46-49. 
Account  of  informal  administration  of  justice  in   Kentucky   mountains. 

76.  CATLETT,  CLAY 

An  economic  and  social  survey  of  Augusta  County.    Charlottesville,  1928.   168p. 
(University  of  Virginia  Record.  Extension  Series.  XII  No.  7). 

77.  CHASE,  LEWIS  I. 

Changes  in  social  and  economic  status  of  the  people  of  Sullivan  County  for  a 
thirty  year  period.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.  1936. 

78.  CHRISTIANSEN,  JOHN   R. 

Informal  social  participation  in   five  Kentucky  counties.    Kentucky  Agricultural 
Experiment  Station.  Progress  Report  43,  1956.  lip.  proc. 

Includes  two  counties  in  the  mountain  area. 

79.  COHEN,  IRWIN  B.  AND  OTHERS. 

An  economic  and  social  survey  of  Botetourt  County.    Charlottesville:   University 
of  Virginia,  School  of  Rural  Social  Economics,  1942.   170p. 

80.  CONNER,  MAYNARD  C.  &  WILLIAM  K.  BING 

An  economic  and  social   survey  of  Patrick   County.   Charlottesville,   1937,   102p. 
(University  of  Virginia  Record.  Extension  Series.  XXI   No.  6). 

81.  CORNELL,  F.  D. 

A  social  and  economic  survey  of  the  Spencer  soil  conservation  area.  West  Vir- 
ginia Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  269,  1936.  36p. 

82.  DAVIDSON,   DWIGHT   M.   AND   R.    L.   HUMMEL 

Standards    of    living    in    six    Vriginia    counties.    Washington:     Farm    Security 
Administration,  1940.  116p.  proc.    (Social  Research  Report  No.   15). 
Counties  include  Wythe  &  Rockbridge. 

83.  DULANEY,  BEN   B. 

An   economic   and  social   survey   of   Washington   County.     Charlottesville,    1932, 
107p.   (University  of  Virginia  Record.  Extension  Series.  XVII  No.  6). 

84.  EBERT,  CHARLES  H. 

Furniture  making  in    High   Point.  North    Carolina   Historical  Revieiv   36:330-39 
1959. 

History  of  the  rise  of  the  furniture  industry  in  the  High  Point,  North  Carolina 
area. 

85.  EDDY,  DONALD 

War  in  Kentucky.  American  Magazine  148  S  1949  36-37  +  . 

Crime  in  Harlan  County,  Kentucky. 

86.  ESTABROOK,  ARTHUR   H. 

The  real  mountain  problem  of  South  Carolina  ML&W  Ja.   1930    15-20. 

A  study  of  the  "underprivileged  area"  of  the  mountains  of  South  Carolina. 

86A.    FISHMAN,  LEO 

Employment  changes  in  West  Virginia,   1948-1958.   Morgantown:   West  Virginia 
University,  1961.  26p.    (West  Virginia  University  Business  and  Economic  Studies 

7:3). 

87.  FOSCUE,  E.  J. 

Gatlinburg:   a  mountain  community.  Economic  Geography  21:192-205     1945. 

14 


88.  FRIEDMANN,  JOHN  R. 

The  spatial  structure  of  economic  development  in  the  Tennessee  Valley.  Chicago: 
University  of  Chicago,  1955.  187p.  (University  of  Chicago.  Department  of 
Geography.  Research  Paper  39). 

89.  GALLOWAY,  Robert  E. 

Contrast  in  the  rural  social  organization  of  Rabun  County,  Georgia  and  Frank- 
lin County,  Washington.  Rural  Sociology  13:384-400.  1948. 

90.  GALLOWAY,  ROBERT  E. 

Rural  manpower  in  eastern  Kentucky,  a  study  of  under-employment  among 
rural  workers  in  economic  area  eight.  Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment  Station. 
Bulletin  627,  1955.  32p. 

91.  GALLOWAY,  ROBERT  E.  &  HOWARD  W.  BEERS. 

Utilization  of  rural  manpower  in  eastern  Kentucky.  Kentucky  Agricultural 
Experiment  Station.  RS-3,   1953. 

92.  GARNETT,  WILLIAM  E. 

A  social  study  of  the  Blacksburg  Community.  Virginia  Agricultural  Experi- 
ment Station.  Bulletin  299,  1935.   105p. 

93.  GARNETT,  WILLIAM  E.  AND  ALLEN  DAVID  EDWARDS 

Virginia's  marginal  population— a  study  in  rural  poverty.  Virginia  Agricul- 
tural Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  335,  1941.   166p. 

94.  GEISLER  ADALENE 

An  economic  study  of  old  age  pensions  with  special  reference  to  seven  upper 
East  Tennessee  counties.  Thesis.  ETSC.   1953. 

95.  GIBSON,  ERNEST  WILLIS 

The  economic  history  of  Boyd  County,  Kentucky.  Thesis.  University  of  Ken- 
tucky. 1929. 

96.  GRIGSBY,  S.  E.  &  HAROLD  HOFFSOMMER 

Rural  social  organization  of  Frederick  County,  Maryland.  Maryland  Agricul- 
tural Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  A51,  1949. 

97.  GULLICK,  GUY  A. 

Greenville  County,  economic  and  social.  Columiba,  S.  G;  University  of  South 
Carolina,  1921.  89p.   (University  of  South  Carolina  Bulletin  102). 

98.  HALEY,  ELLIOTT  C.  AND   OTHERS 

An  economic  and  social  survey  of  Warren  County.  Charlottesville:  University 
of  Virginia.    School  of  Rural  Social  Economics,  1943.  218p. 

99.  HANNA,  EDWIN  B. 

The  integration  of  locality  groups  in  an  eastern  Kentucky  county.  Kentucky 
Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  640,  1956.  58p. 

100.  HANCZARYK,    EDWIN    W. 

The  labor  force  in  West  Virginia— a  study  of  its  growth  and  characteristics. 
Morgantown:  West  Virginia  University,  1954.  65p.  (West  Virginia  University 
Business  and  Economic  Studies  3:4). 

101.  HARTMAN,  VLADIMIR  E. 

Cultural  study  of  a  mountain  community  in  western  North  Carolina.  Ph.D. 
University  of  North  Carolina.  1957. 

Avery  County,  North  Carolina. 

102.  HAWLEY,  MARION  H. 

Personal  income  in  Alabama  counties  since  1939.  University  of  Alabama. 
Bureau  of  Business  Research.   Printed  Series  25,    1959.   31p. 

103.  HEATH,  EMILY  P. 

A  study  of  the  relationship  existing  between  amount  of  education  completed 
by  white  &  Negro  heads  of  households  in  Floyd  County,  Georgia  and  certain 
independent  variables.  Thesis.   University   of  Georgia.    1948. 

15 


104.  HILL,  RAYMOND  T. 

The  patterns  of  town  sites  in  southern  West  Virginia.  Proceedijigs  of  the  West 

Virginia  Academy  of  Science   1957-58.   111-14. 

Discussion  of  the  development  of  the  "shoestring"  pattern   in  valley  towns. 

105.  HOLLY,  J.  FRED 

The  economy   of   Greeneville,   Tennessee.   Knoxville:    University   of    Tennessee. 
Bureau  of  Research.  Study  No.  21,  1950.  62p. 

106.  HUDSON,  G.  DONALD 

Augusta   County,   Virginia;    a   study   of  patterns.    Ph.D.    University   of   Chicago. 
1935. 

107.  HUMBERT,  R.  L. 

Industrial    Survey,    Bland     County,     Virginia.      Blackshurg:     VPI.     Engineering 
Extension  Division.  1930.  56p. 

108.  HUMBERT,  R.  L. 

Industrial   Survey,   Buchanan    County,   Virginia.   Blacksburg:    VPI.    Engineering 
Extension  Division.   1930.  56p. 

109.  HUMBERT,  R.  L. 

Industrial  Survey,  Carroll   County,  Virginia.  Blacksburg:   VPI.  Engineering  Ex- 
tension Division.  1929.  56p. 

110.  HUMBERT,  R.  L. 

Industrial   Survey,   Craig   County,    Virginia.    Blacksburg:    VPI.    Engineering    Ex- 
tension Division.  1930.  GOp. 

111.  HUMBERT,  R.  L. 

Industrial   Survey,   Dickenson    County,    Virginia.   Blacksburg:    VPI.    Engineering 
Extension  Division.  1930.68p. 

112.  HUMBERT,  R.  L. 

Industrial   Survey,   Floyd   County,   Virginia.   Blacksburg:    VPI.    Engineering   Ex- 
tension Division.  1930.  55p. 

113.  HUMBERT,  R.  L. 

Industrial    Survey,   Giles   County,   Virginia.    Blacksburg:    VPI.    Engineering    Ex- 
tension Division.  1929.  64p. 

114.  HUMBERT,  R.  L. 

Industrial  Survey,  Grayson  County,  Virginia.  Blacksburg:  VPI.  Engineering  Ex- 
tension Division.  1929.  61  p. 

115.  HUMBERT,  R.  L. 

Industrial  Survey,  Lee  County,  Virginia.  Blacksburg:    VPI.   Engineering   Exten- 
sion Division.  1929.  82p. 

116.  HUMBERT,  R.  L. 

Industrial   Survey,   Montgomery    County   &   City   of   Radford,    Virginia.    Blacks- 
burg: VPI.  Engineering  Extension  Division.  1929.  91p. 

117.  HUMBERT,  R.  L. 

Industrial  Survey,  Pulaski  County,  Virginia.    Blacksburg:   VPI.   Engineering  Ex- 
tension Division.   1929.  74p. 

118.  HUMBERT,  R.  L.,  et  al. 

Industrial    Survey,    Roanoke    County,    Virginia.    Blacksburg:    VPI.    Engineering 
Extension  Division.   1929.  70p. 

119.  HUMBERT,  R.  L. 

Industrial  Survey,  Russell   County,   Virginia.   Blacksburg:   VPI.  Engineering  Ex- 
tension Division.  1930.  71  p. 

120.  HUMBERT  R.  L. 

Industrial   Survey,   Scott    County,    Virginia.    Blacksburg:    VPI.    Engineering    Ex- 
tension Division.  1929.  69p. 

16 


121.  HUMBERT,  R.   L. 

Industrial  Survey,  Smyth  County,  Virginia.  Blacksburg:  VPI.  Engineering  Ex- 
tension Division.   1930.  89p. 

122.  HUMBERT,  R.  L. 

Industrial  Survey,  Tazewell  County,  Virginia.  Blacksburg:  VPI.  Engineering 
Extension  Division.  1930.  103p. 

123.  HUMBERT,  R.  L. 

Industrial  Survey,  Washington  County,  Virginia.  Blacksburg:  VPI.  Engineering 
Extension  Division.  1929.  70p. 

124.  HUMBERT,  R.  L. 

Industrial  Survey,  Wise  County,  Virginia.  Blacksburg:  VPI.  Engineering  Exten- 
sion Division.  1929.  lOOp. 

125.  HUMBERT,  R.  L. 

Industrial  Survey,  Wythe  County,  Virginia.  Blacksburg:  VPI.  Engineering  Ex- 
tension Division.  1929.  72p. 

126.  JOHNSON,  JOHN  L. 

Distribution  of  income  payments  to  individuals  in  Kentucky  counties  by 
amounts,  by  type,  and  by  size,   1950.  Ph.D.   University  of  Kentucky.   1953. 

127.  KENNEDY,  RALPH  E. 

An  economic  and  social  survey  of  Wise  County.  Charlottesville,  1928.  147p. 
(University  of  Virginia  Record.  Extension  Series.  XII  No.   11). 

128.  KENTUCKY.   DEPARTMENT  OF  ECONOMIC  DEVEOLPMENT 

Action  programs  for  eastern   Kentucky.   Erankfort,    1958.   85p. 
The  Eastern  Kentucky  Flood  Rehabilitation  Study.  Contents:    (1)  Flood  damage 
prevention  program;    (2)  Prerequisites  to  economic  development;    (3)  Economic 
development  programs;    (4)  Regional  planning  program. 

129.  KIDD,  PAUL  EAKLE 

Governmental  assistance  to  industrial  development  in  West  Virginia.  Thesis. 
West  Virginia  University.  1958. 

130.  LANCASTER,  JOHN   L. 

Personal  income  estimates  for  Virginia  counties  and  cities,  1955.  Charlottes- 
ville: University  of  Virginia.  Bureau  of  Population  and  Economic  Research. 
1958.  44p. 

131.  LINGER,  MARGARET  VIRGINIA. 

French  Creek  community.  Thesis.  West  Virginia   University.   1934. 
Study  of  a  rural  community  in  central  West  Virginia. 

132.  LITTLE,    (ARTHUR  D.)  INC. 

Report  to  State  of  West  Virginia.  Cambridge,  Mass.,  1955. 
vl  Survey  of  industrial  development 
v2  Community  development  program 

Supplementary  Report.  1955. 

vl  Chemicals  and  related  processing 
v2  The  apparel  industry 
v3  Metal  working  industry 
v4  Wood  and  wood  products 

133.  LUEBKE,  B.  H. 

Problems  created  by  the  Douglas  Reservoir  in  East  Tennessee.  Journal  of  the 
Tennessee  Academy  of  Science  29:246-59    1954. 

134.  LOOMIS,  CHARLES  P.  AND  L.  S.  DODSON 

Standards  of  living  in  four  Southern  Appalachian  mountain  counties.  Wash- 
ington: Farm  Security  Administration,  1938.  59p.  proc.  (Social  Research  Report 
No.  10.) 

Avery  &  Haywood  Counties,  North  Carolina;  Magoffin  &  Morgan  Counties, 
Kentucky. 

17 


135.  MAYO,  S.  C. 

Organized  rural  communities;  a  series  of  case  studies  from  western  North  Caro- 
lina. North  Carolina  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Progress  Report  RS-20, 
1954.  64p. 

136.  METZLER,  W.  H.  AND  W.  F.  PORTER 

Employment  and  underemployment  of  rural  people  in  the  Upper  Mononga- 
hela  Valley,  West  Virginia.  West  Virginia  Agricultural  Experiment  Station. 
Bulletin  404,  1957.  69p. 

137.  MILLIGAN,  JACK  A. 

A  comparison  of  the  personal  and  economic  characteristics  of  the  mobile  and 
immobile  unemployed  in  the  Morgantown,  W.  Va.  labor  market  area.  Thesis. 
West  Virginia   University.   1960. 

138.  MOBLEY,  JOE  L. 

A  hard  look  at  tomorrow.  MLirW.  Summer  1960.  5-10. 

An  incisive  examination  of  the  economic  and  social  problems  of  Eastern  Ken- 
tucky—"the  area   has   not   been   self-supporting   in   the  past   thirty   years." 

139.  MONTGOMERY,  JAMES  E. 

Two  resettlement  communities  on  the  Cumberland  Plateau.  Thesis.  Vanderbilt 
University.   1941. 

140.  MYERS,  WILL  S.  AND  OTHERS 

Kentucky  income  payments  by  counties;  1939,  1947,  1950  and  1951.  Lexington; 
1953.  37p.    (University  of  Kentucky.  Bureau  of  Business  Research.  Bulletin  26). 

141.  NICHOLLS,  WILLIAM  H. 

Human  resources  and  industrial  development  in  the  Upper  East  Tennessee 
Valley,   1900-1950.  Quarterly  Journal  of  Economics  71:289-316.    1957. 

141A.    NICHOLLS,  WILLIAM   H. 

Industrial-urban  development  and  agricultural  adjustments,  Tennessee  Valley 
and  Piedmont.  Journal  of  Political  Economy  68:135-49    1960. 

142.  NICHOLLS,  WILLIAM  H. 

Some  foundations  of  economic  development  in  the  Upper  East  Tennessee 
Valley,  1850-1900.  Journal  of  Political  Economy  64:277-302,  400-15.   1956. 

143.  OGLE,   MILTON 

In  the  land  of  the  sky"s  the  limit.  ML&W.  Winter  1959    7-16. 
An  account  of  the  Balsam  Grove  community  in  western  North  Carolina    (Ashe- 
ville  area.)  Describes  the  success  in  raising  the  living  standards  and   economic 
level  of  the  area. 

141.    OYLER,  MERTON 

Community  and  neighborhood  groupings  in  Knott  County,  Kentucky.  Ken- 
tucky Agricultural   Experiment   Station.   Bulletin   366,    1936. 

145.  PICKERAL,  J.  JULIAN   &  GORDON    FOGG 

An  economic  and  social  survey  of  Frederick  County.  Charlottesville,  1930.  142p. 
(University  of  Virginia  Record.  Extension  Series.  XV  No.  2.) 

146.  PORTER,  WARD   F. 

Elk  Garden,  West  Virginia;  a  reconnaissance  survey  of  a  problem  town.  West 
Virginia  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  355-T,  1952  55p. 

147.  RAY,   HERMAN 

An  economic,  educational  and  social  survey  of  Franklin  County,  Tennessee. 
Thesis.    University  of  Tennessee.   1937. 

148.  ROSS,  MALCOLM 

My  neighbors  hold  to  mountain  ways.  National  Geographic   113:856-80   1958. 

149.  SCHWENDEMAN,  JOSEPH  R. 

A  study  of  the  woodworking  industry  of  the  eastern  mountains  and  coal  field 
region  of  Kentucky.  Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky.   1957. 

18 


150.  SHALETT,  SIDNEY 

Big  ear  in  lost  valley.  Saturday  Evening  Post  Ap  9,  1960  28-29. 

Describes  the  impact  on  a  remote  area  of  t he  location  of  a  great  radio-astronomy 
research  center.  Pendleton  County,  West  Virginia. 

151.  SHEPPARD,  MURIEL  E. 

Forgotten  valley.  South  Atlantic  Quarterly  33:63-82.   1934. 

Description  of  life  in  a  remote  mountain  area  of  North  Carolina. 

152.  SMITH,  LEE  S. 

Rural  leadership  in  Roane  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee. 
1942. 

153.  STEVENS,  G.  R. 

An  economic  and  social  survey  of  Roanoke  County.  Charlottesville,  1930,  130p. 
(University  of  Virginia  Record.  Extension  Series,  XV  No.   1). 

154.  TATE,  LELAND  B. 

An  economic  and  social  survey  of  Russel  County.  Charlottesville,  1931.  126p. 
(University  of  Virginia  Record.  Extension  Series.  XVI  No.  1). 

155.  TATE,  LELAND  B. 

Lebanon,    a    Virginia    community.    Virginia    Agricultural    Experiment    Station. 

Bulletin  352,  1943.  55p. 

A  socio-economic  study  of  a  county  seat  town  in  southwestern  Virginia. 

155A.    TENNESSEE   STATE   PLANNING    COMMISSION 

Tennessee  River  Gorge;  its  scenic  preservation.  Nashville:  the  Commission,  1961. 
104p.  proc.    (Its  publication  311). 

156.  THOMPSON,  JAMES  H.  AND  THOMAS  S.  ISAACK 

Factors  influencing  plant  location  in  West  Virginia  1945-1956.  Morgantown: 
West  Virginia  University,  1956.  24p.  (West  Virginia  University  Business  and 
Economic  Studies  5:1). 

157.  THOMPSON,  JAMES  H. 

Labor  market  areas  for  manufacturing  plants  in  West  Virginia.  Morgantown: 
West  Virginia  University,  1955.  27p.  (West  Virginia  University  Business  and 
Economic  Studies  4:3). 

158.  TUNLEY,  ROUL 

The  strange  case  of  West  Virginia  Saturday  Evening  Post  F  6,  1960.  19-20,  64-66. 

"Although  rich  in  resources  and  natural  beauty  the  Mountain  State  suffers  from 
chronic,  grinding  poverty.   A  report  on  an  American  paradox." 

159.  UPPER  EAST  TENNESSEE  REGIONAL  PLANNING   COMMISSION 

Industrial  site  survey  of  Carter  County,  Sullivan  County,  Washington  County. 
Nashville:  Tennessee  State  Planning  Commission,  1959.  106p.  (Publication  299 
of  the  Tennnessee  State  Planning  Commission). 

160.  VIRGINIA.  DEPARTMENT  OF  CONSERVATION  &  DEVELOPMENT.  DIVI- 
SION OF  INDUSTRIAL  DEVELOPMENT. 

Manufacturing  plants  in  Virginia  established  since  1940,  listed  by  counties  and 
independent  cities.  Richmond,   1958.  34p. 

161.  WALKER,  LEWIS  M.,  JR. 

An  economic  and  social  survey  of  Alleghany  County.  Charlottesville,  1936.  104p. 
(University  of  Virginia  Record.  Extension  Series.   XX   No.   7). 

162.  WARNER,  PAUL  L. 

An  economic  and  social  survey  of  Clarke  County.  Charlottesville,   1925   127p. 
(University  of  Virginia  Record.  Extension  Series  IX  No.  12). 

163.  WEBB,  GEORGE  W. 

The  resources  of  the  Cumberland  Plateau  as  exemplified  by  Cumberland  County, 
Tennessee;   a  geographic  analysis.  Thesis.   University  of  Tennessee.   1956. 

19 


164.  WEST   VIRGINIA,    DEPARTMENT    OF    EMPLOYMEN T    SECURITY. 
West   Virginia   Labor   Force.   Charleston    1960+. 

vl:l  Boone,  Logan,  and  Mingo 

vl:2  McDowell,   Raleigh,   and   Wyoming 

"A  study  of  the  manpower  resources  of  the  State  of  West  Virginia." 

165.  WITZEL,  WILLIAM  T. 

The  resources  and  industries  of   the  New   River   drainage   basin   in   West   Vir- 
ginia. Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.   1957. 

166.  WOOD,  HARIETTE 

The  Kentucky   Mountains,  a  study  of   four  counties  of  southeastern    Kentucky. 
Thesis.  University  of  North  Carolina.  1930. 

167.  WOODSON,   MARSHALL  S. 

An  economic  survev  of  Oconee  County.   Thesis.   University   of  South   Carolina. 
1923. 

168.  WRITERS'  PROGRAM.  KENTUCKY 

In  the  land  of  Breathitt.  Northport,  New  York:   Bacon,  Percy  &  Doggett,   1941. 
165p.    (American  Guide  Series). 


20 


Local  Government 


169.  BANNERMAN,  ARTHUR  M. 

A  plan  of  government  for  a  southern  community.  Thesis.  University  of  North 
Carolina.  1940. 

Study  of  Cherokee  County,  North  Carolina. 

170.  BOSWORTH,  KARL  A. 

Tennessee  Valley  country;  rural  government  in  the  hill  country  of  Alabama. 
University  of  Alabama.  Bureau  of  Public  Administration.  Publication  4,  1941. 
117p. 

171.  COLLINS,  ERNEST 

Political  behavior  in  Breathitt,  Knott,  Perry  and  Leslie  counties,  Kentucky. 
Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky.  1940. 

172.  FENTON,  JOHN    H. 

Politics  in  the  border  states.  New  Orleans:   Hauser,  1957.  230p. 

"A  study  of  the  patterns  of  political  organization,  and  political  change,  common 

to  the  border  states— Maryland,  West  Virginia,  Kentucky  and  Missouri." 

173.  JARVIS,  JAMES  A. 

Factors  influencing  political  behavior  in  Bell,  Clay,  Knox,  and  Whitley  Coun- 
ties. Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky.   1948. 

173A.    KENTUCKY  LEGISLATOR 

How  an  election  was  bought  and  sold.  Harpers.  221  O    1960    33-38. 

Discussion  of  corrupt  political  practices  in  a  county  in  the  eastern  Kentucky 
coal  fields. 

174.  NICKS,  ROY  S. 

City-county  separation  in  Tennessee;  a  case  study  of  Kingsport  and  Sullivan 
County.    Thesis.    University  of  Tennessee.  1957. 

175.  REEVES,  JOHN  E. 

Population  trends  and  other  factors  influencing  the  voting  habits  of  the  Cum- 
berland Valley  region  of  Southeastern  Kentucky.  Thesis.  University  of  Ken- 
tucky. 1938. 

176.  RHYME,  EDWIN 

Political  leaership  and  social  structure  in  a  rural  county.  Thesis.  University  of 
North  Carolina.   1950. 

177.  ROGERS,  KATHERINE  V. 

A  description  of  county  government  in  Gordon,  Clarke,  ami  Paulding  counties, 
Georgia.  Thesis.  University  of  Georgia.  1941. 

178.  STRADLEY,  WILLIAM  B. 

A  study  of  local  sources  of  support  of  local  government  agencies  in  23  selected 
Tennessee  counties.  Ed.D.  University  of  Tennessee.   1958. 

179.  TENNESSEE  TAXPAYERS  ASSOCIATION 

A  report  of  the  survey  of  the  finances  and  management  of  the  government  of 
Knox  County.  1934.  124p. 

180.  TENNESSEE  TAXPAYERS  ASSOCIATION 

A  report  of  the  survey  of  the  finances  and  management  of  the  government  of 
Washington  County.  1934.  103p. 

181.  VAN  ARK,  CARROLL 

Women  rule  a  Cumberland  town.  Colliers  110  N  7,  1942  58-59.  Spencer,  Tennes- 
see, elects  a  full  slate  of  women  officials. 


21 


Family  Life,  Children 


182.  ANDERSON,  FRANCES  GAINES 

Leisure  time  interests  and  activities  of  girls  in  high  school.  (Charleston, 
W.  Va.).  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.   1942. 

183.  BAUDER,  WARD  W. 

Characteristics  of  families  on  small  farms.  Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment 
Station.  Bulletin  644,  1956.  46p. 

Includes  data  on  size  of  family  unit,  education,  mobility,  income,  etc.  Magoffin  & 
Powell  counties  are  among  those  studied. 

184.  BESHEARS,  RALPH  L. 

A  descriptive  study  of  juvenile  delinquency  in  selected  counties  in  the  State 
of  North  Carolina.  Thesis.  Appalachian  State  Teachers  College.  1958. 

185.  BLISS,  RUSSELL  L. 

Teenage  dating  behavior  in  two  eastern  Kentucky  high  schools.  Thesis.  Uni- 
versity of  Kentucky.   1957. 

186.  BOYD,  VIRLYN  A. 

Household  and  family  composition  in  selected  rural  areas  of  eleven  Kentucky 
counties.    Thesis.    University  of  Kentucky.  1948. 

Eight  of  the  counties  studied  are  in  the  Southern  Appalachian  area. 

187.  BRIGHT,  MILDRED 

Harlan  County  organizes  for  youth  welfare.  School  and  Society  55:588-90   1942. 

Discussion  of  annual  county-wide  Youth  Guidance  Institute. 

188.  BROWN,  BARBARA 

Needs  and  interests  in  family  relationships  of  a  selected  group  of  West  Vir- 
ginia eighth  and  ninth  grade  pupils,  1948-1949.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  Uni- 
versity. 1949. 

189.  BROWN,  JAMES  S. 

Conjugal  family  and  the  extended  family  group.  American  Sociological  Review 

17:297-306    1952. 

Locus  is  Beech  Creek,  an  isolated  neighborhood  in  the  Kentucky  mountains. 

190.  BROWN,  JAMES  S. 

The  family  group  in  a  Kentucky  mountain  farming  community.  Kentucky  Agri- 
cultural Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  588,  1958.  38p. 

191.  BROWN,  JAMES  S. 

The  farm  family  in  a  Kentucky  mountain  neighborhood.  Kentucky  Agricultural 
Experiment  Station.   Bulletin  587,   1952.  42p. 

192.  BROWN,  JAMES   S. 

The  social  organization  of  an  isolated  Kentucky  mountain  neighborhood.  Ph.D. 
Harvard  University.  1950. 

"This  is  a  study  of  the  social  organization  of  Beech  Creek,  an  isolated  neighbor- 
hood of  thirty-eight  families  in  the  mountains  of  Kentucky."  Detailed  study 
of  daily  life  and  social  relationships. 

193.  CLOPPER,  EDWARD  N. 

Child  welfare  in  Kentucky.  New  York:   National  Child  Labor  Committee,   1919. 

322p. 

Includes  material  on  the  mountain  counties. 

194.  DAY,  D.  L. 

Impact  of  World  War  II  on  juvenile  delinquency  in  Knox  County,  Tennessee. 
Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.  1948. 

22 


195.  FARR,  T.  J. 

Tennessee  folk  beliefs  concerning  children.  Journal  of  American  Folklore. 
52:112-16.  1939. 

"Folk   beliefs  of  Tennessee,   especially   of   the   remote   mountain    sections." 

196.  GARNETT,  WILLIAM   E. 

Virginia  rural  youth  adjustments.  Virginia  Agricultural  Experiment  Station. 
Bulletin  405,  1947.  80p. 

Contains  much  useful  statistical  information   by  counties. 

197.  HAHN,  WILLIAM  PARSONS 

The  leisure  time  activities  and  interests  of  the  boys  of  Spencer  High  School. 
Thesis.  West  Virginia   University.    1939. 

198.  HAM,  TOM 

Close-up  of  a  hillbilly   family.  A  nit)  Iran   Mercury  52:659-65     1941. 

Account  of  the  way  of  life  of  the  Long  family  in  the  north  Georgia  hills. 

199.  HAMILTON,  C.  HORACE. 

Recent  changes  in  the  social  and  economic  status  of  farm  families  in  North 
Carolina.  North  Carolina  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  309,  1937. 
180p. 

200.  HICKEY,  MARGARET 

Forgotten  children;  miracle  of  Pilot  Knob.  Ladies  Home  Journal  Ja  1918  23-24. 
Pilot  Knob  is  a  provery-stricken  community  in  East  Tennessee.  Decribes  the 
way  of  life  &  work  of  the  Save  the  Children  Federation  to  improve  conditions. 

201.  HINES,  JAMES 

Portrait  of  a  hill-billy.  America)}  Mercury.  Ap   1952    49-57. 

Describes  the  way  of  life  of  Ike  Snoddy;  a  "poor  white"  resident  of  the  Ken- 
tucky mountains. 

202.  HITCH,  MARGARET  A. 

Life  in  the  Blue  Ridge  Hollow.  Journal  of  Geography  30:309-322.   1931. 
An  account  of  life  in  an  isolated  mountain  area  of  western  Virginia. 

203.  HYLAND,  THOMAS  S. 

Fruitful  mountaineers.  Life.  D  26,   1949    60-67. 

Discussion  of  the  high  birth   rate  and   large   families   typical   of   the   mountain 

regions.  Leslie  County,  Kentucky  is  featured. 

203A.    KANAWHA   WELE\RE  COUNCIL 

Our  troubled  children.  Charleston,  1957.  73p.  proc. 

A  study  of  juvenile  delinquency   in  Kanawha  County,  West   Virginia. 

204.  LEWIS  CLAUDIA 

Children  of  the  Cumberland.  New  York:  Columbia  University  Press,  1946.  217p. 
"This  is  a  book  about  a  group  of  children  in  the  Southern   mountains." 

205.  MILLER,  NORA 

Girl  in  the  rural  family.  Chapel  Hill:  University  of  North  Carolina  Press,  1935. 

108p. 

Chapter  3:     The  mountain  farm  family. 

Chapter  4:     The  soft  coal  mine  family. 

206.  MOWBRAY,  A/TLEE  H. 

Development  of  adoption   practices  in  East  Tennessee.  Thesis.   ETSC.    1953. 

207.  QUARLES,  MARY  ANN 

A  comparison  of  some  aspects  of  family  life  between  two  areas  of  Leslie  Coun- 
ty, Kentucky.  Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky.  1952. 

208.  REYNOLDS,  ROY  LEE 

A  studv  of  parent-child  relationships  in  Greene  Countv,  Tennessee.  Thesis. 
ETSC.  1951. 

23 


209.  ROBERTS,  LEONARD  W. 

Up  Cutshin  and  down  Greasy.  Lexington:   University  of  Kentucky   Press,   1959. 

165p. 

The  author  spent  some  years  in  learning  and  recording   the   folkways  of   the 

Couch  Family.    The  family  has  lived  for  several  generations  in  a  remote  section 

of  the  mountains  of  Eastern  Kentucky.   Informal  narrative  account. 

210.  ROPER,  ROSALIE 

An  analysis  of  youth  centers  for  white  youth  in  three  Tennessee  cities:  John- 
son Gity,  Elizabethton,  and  Kingsport.    Thesis.  ETSC.  1958. 

211.  SCHMITT,  LEONARD  R. 

Recreational  habits  of  rural  youth  in  selected  communities  of  Hamilton  Coun- 
ty, Tennessee.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.  1949. 

212.  SHERMAN,  MANDEL 

The  development  of  attitudes.  A  study  of  the  attitudes  of  mountain  children. 
New  York:  Payne  Fund,  1933.  54p. 

213.  SIZER,  LEONARD  M.  AND  OTHERS 

The  learning  experiences  of  youth  groups;  a  study  of  4-H  clubs  in  Barbour 
County,  W.  Va.  West  Virginia  University  Agricultural  Experiment  Station. 
Bulletin  427,  1959.  31p. 

214.  SOLLENBERGER,   RICHARD    T. 

The  response  of  isolated  mountain  children  to  unusual  stimuli.  Thesis.  Uni- 
versity of  Virginia.  1933. 

215.  WILLIAMS,  FAITH  AND  OTHERS 

Family  living  in  Knott  County,  Kentucky.  Washington:  GPO,  1937,  68p.  (USDA. 
Technical  Bulletin  576). 

216.  YOUMANS,  E.  GRANT 

The  educational  attainment  and  future  plans  of  Kentucky  rural  youths.  Ken- 
tucky Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  664,  1959.  46p. 

A  study  of  the  role  of  socio-economic  origins  in  the  educational  attainment  and 
aspirations  of  rural  youth.  Elliott  County  in  the  eastern  mountains  is  one  of 
the  three  counties  studied. 

217.  ZIMMERMAN,  CARLE  C. 

Family  and  society;  a  study  of  the  sociology  of  reconstruction.  New  York:  Van 
Nostrand,  1935.  61  lp. 

Contains  a  detailed  description  and  analysis  of  the  "Highlander."  Study  based 
on  data  gathered  in  the  Arkansas  Ozarks.  However,  it  is  of  importance  to  those 
interested  in  similar  areas  of  the  Southern  Appalachians. 


24 


Measurements  of  Intelligence  and  Aptitude 

218.  ASHER,  E.  J. 

Inadequacy  of  current  intelligence  tests  for  testing  Kentucky  mountain  children. 
Pedagogical  Seminary  46:480-86    1935. 

"The  differences  in  the  social  and  material  environment  of  Kentucky  moun- 
tain children  and  children  in  urban  communities  are  such  that  intelligence 
tests  standardized  on  urban  children  are  not  adequate  for  measuring  the  kind 
or  amount  of  intelligence  of  Kentucky  mountain  children." 

21 8A.    DRAKE,  CHARLES 

Migration  myths.  MLirW  Winter  1960  43-45;  Spring  1961  9-13  +  . 
An  examination  of  the  various  theories   advanced   to  explain   the   low  IQ's   of 
migrant  groups.    Author  concludes  that  "migrant  children  have  an  intelligence 
potential    not   unlike   the   established   population,   and    that    eventually,    under 
favorable  circumstances,  they  can  achieve  at  a  normal  level." 

219.  HERNDON,  C.  NASH 

Intelligence  in  family  groups  in   the  Blue  Ridge  Mountains.  Eugenics  Quarter- 
ly 1:53-57    1954. 
The  223  individuals  tested  had  a  mean  1Q  score  of  94.52. 

220.  HIRSCH,  NATHANIEL 

An  experimental  study  of  the  cast  Kentucky  mountaineers;  a  study  in  heredity 
and  environment.  Genetic  Psychology  Monograph  3:189-244.  1928. 

221.  HIRSCH,  NATHANIEL 

A   summary   of  some  of   the   results   from   an  experimental   study   of   the   east 
Kentucky    mountaineers.    Proceedings    of    the    National    Academy    of    Science. 
13:18-21    1927. 
Summary  of  intelligence  tests  given  to  1,945  young  people. 

222.  JONES,  LESLIE 

An  experimental  and  field  study  of  north  Georgia  mountaineers.  Thesis.  Uni- 
versity of  Georgia.   1934. 

223.  MANNE,  JACK 

Mental  deficiency  in  a  closely  inbred  mountain  clan.  Mental  Hygiene  20:269-79. 

1936. 

Locus:   Virginia  mountains. 

224.  SHERMAN,  MANDEL  AND  CORA   B.  KEY 

The  intelligence  of  isolated  mountain  children.  Child  Development  3:279-90. 
1932. 

"The  young  children  of  the  various  hollows  do  not  differ  greatly  in  intelligence, 
whereas  great  differences  are  found  between  the  older  children." 
The  communities  studied  were  located  approximately  100  miles  west  of  Wash- 
ington, D.G.,  in  the  Blue  Ridge  Mountains. 

225.  WHEELER,  LESTER  R. 

Comparative  study  of  the  intelligence  of  east  Tennessee  mountain  children. 
Journal  of  Educational  Psychology  33:321-34    1942. 

"The  average  mountain  child  has  gained  ten  points  in  IQ,  or  nearly  one  point 
a  year  during  the  past  ten  years." 

226.  WHEELER,  LESTER  R. 

The  intelligence  of  east  Tennessee  mountain  children.  Journal  of  Educational 
Psychology  23:351-370    1932. 

"The  median  IQ  of  mountain  children  seems  to  be  near  normal  at  age  six 
but  shows  a  fairly  consistent  decrease  in  intelligence  with  an  increase  in 
chronological  age." 

25 


227.    WHEELER,  LESTER  R.  AND  V.  D.  WHEELER 

The  musical  ability  of  mountain   children   as   measured   by   the   Seashore   Test 
of  musical  talent,  journal  of  Genetic  Psychology  43:352-376.   1933. 
"The  musical  talent  of  East  Tennessee  mountain  children,  as  measured  by  the 
Seashore   Tests,   compares   favorable   with    that    of  other    unselected    groups    in 
various  sections  of  the  country." 


2G 


Public  Health,  Nutrition 


228.  AKERS,  CARMEN  EUGENE 

Tuberculosis  in  eastern  Kentucky.  Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky.  1951. 

229.  BACON,  H.  STUART  AND  R.  W.  JESSEE 

Immunization  cooperation  in  southwest  Virginia.  Berea:  Council  of  the  Southern 
Mountains,  1959.  16p.  proc. 

A  study  of  the  reactions  of  residents  of  three  SW  Virginia  counties  to  immuni- 
zation programs.    Relates  socio-economic  factors  to  cooperation. 

230.  BARNARD,  EUNICE  F. 

Food  joins  the  three  R's.  Survey  Graphic  32:428-31   1943. 

Describes  efforts  to  improve  the  diets  of  children  in  the  Kentucky  hill  country 
by  working  through  the  public  schools. 

231.  BEEBE,  GILBERT  W. 

Contraception  and  fertility  in  the  Southern  Appalachians.  Baltimore:  Williams 
&  Wilkins,  1942.  274p. 

"The  study  comes  to  a  focus  upon  the  population  of  the  southern  Appalachians, 
especially  the  residents  of  the  coal  plateaus.  The  empirical  observations  concern 
a  sample  of  thirteen  hundred  families  in  Logan  County,  West   Virginia." 

232.  BEEBE,  GILBERT  W.  AND  M.  A.   GEISLER 

Control  of  conception  in  a  selected  rural  sample.  Human  Biology  14:1    1942   1-20. 

233.  BELCHER,  JOHN  C.  AND  DONALD  G.  HAY 

Use  of  health  care  services  and  enrollment  in  voluntary  health  insurance  in 
Habersham  County,  Georgia,  1957.  Georgia  Agricultural  Experiment  Station. 
Bulletin  N.S.  73,  1960.  19p. 

234.  BLAND,  MARION   FRANCES 

Supersititions  about  food  and  health  among  Negro  girls  in  elementary  and 
secondary  schools  in  Marion  County,  West  Virginia.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  Uni- 
versity. 1950. 

235.  BRADLEY,  FRANCES  S. 

The  redemption  of  Appalachia.  Hygiea  9:26-30  1931. 

"The  gradual  conversion  of  the  mountaineers  to  the  gospel  of  public  health." 

235A.    BRECKENRIDGE,  MARY 

Wide  neighborhoods.  New  York:  Harpers,   1952.  266p. 
Description  of  the  Frontier  Nursing  Service. 

236.  CHALMERS,  F.  W.  AND  OTHERS 

Nutritional  status  studies  in  Monongalia  County,  West  Virginia.  West  Virginia 
Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  375,  1955. 

237.  CHRISTIANSEN  JOHN  R.  AND  THOMAS  R.  FORD 

Trends  in  the  number  and  distribution  of  medical  doctors  in  Kentucky.  Ken- 
tucky Agricultural  Experiment  Station.    Progress  Report  69,  1958.  22p. 

238.  COOK,  RUTH   ELIZABETH 

Food  habits  of  a  selected  group  of  pupils  in  the  Wellsburg  High  School,  Wells- 
burg,  West  Virginia.    Thesis.    West   Virginia   University.    1951. 

239.  CUNNINGHAM,  ADDIE  J. 

What  progress  in  health  has  been  made  among  the  Negro  youths  of  the 
elementary  school  age  for  the  past  ten  years  in  Talladega  County,  Alabama. 
Thesis.  Alabama  State  College.   1952. 

240.  GARDNER,  CAROLINE 

Clever  Country:  Kentucky  mountain  trails.  New  York:   Revell,  1931     159p. 
"A  story  revealing  the  purpose  of  the  Frontier  Nursing  Service." 

27 


241.  GILLIAM,  LENA 

A  contraceptive  service  for  mountain  women.  Journal  of  Contraception  3:56-59. 
1938. 

242.  HALE,  NATHAN  SCOTT 

A  nutrition  survey  of  some  eleventh  grade  students  in  Washington  County, 
Tennessee.  Thesis.   ETSC.   1957. 

243.  HAMILTON,   C.   HORACE 

Health  and  health  services  in  the  Southern  Appalachians.  North  Carolina  Agri- 
cultural Experiment  Station.  Progress  Report  RS-35,  1959.   105p. 

244.  HARVEY,  K.  F. 

A  descriptive  study  of  patients  accepted  for  service  during  a  three-month 
period  at  Psychiatric  Service  Clinic  in  Norton,  Virginia.  Thesis.  University  of 
Tennessee.  1956. 

245.  HAY,  DONALD  AND  C.  H.  HAMILTON 

Acceptance  of  voluntary  health  insurance  in  four  rural  communities  of  Hay- 
wood County,  N.C.  North  Carolina  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Progress 
Report  RS  24,  1954.  53p. 

246.  JUSTICE,  DEWEY  J. 

A  study  of  the  opinions  of  the  various  classes  of  people  to  Pike  County's  medical 
facilities.  Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky.   1958. 

247.  MARTIN,  ROXIE 

Old  remedies  collected  in  the  Blue  Ridge  Mountains.  Journal  American  Folklore. 
60:184-85  1947. 

248.  MASON,  MARIE 

Rural  family  health  in  a  selected  county  in  Kentucky.  Kentucky  Agricultural 
Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  538,  1949.  46p. 

Powell  County.  Appeared  in  1948  as  a  thesis  at  the  University  of  Kentucky. 

249.  NICOLA,  BLANCHE 

Data  from  physical  examinations.  ML&W  0.   1930    10-13. 

Comparison  of  weight,  height,  etc.,  of  women  students  at  Berea  College  witli 
those  at  Barnard  College. 

249A.    PEARSALL,   MARION 

Healthways  in  a  mountain  county.  ML&W  Winter    1960    7-13. 

Both  "folk"  and  modern  medical  practices  and  care  exist  in  Leslie  County,  Ken- 
tucky. 

250.  POOLE,  ERNEST 

Nurses  on  horseback.  New  York:  Macmillan,  1932.  168p. 

An  account  of  the  operations  of  the  Frontier  Nursing  Service  in  the  Kentucky 
mountains. 

251.  ROBERTS,  LYDIA  J. 

The  nutrition  and  care  of  children  in  a  mountain  county  of  Kentucky.  U.  S. 
Department  of  Labor.   Children's  Btueau.  Publication  110,  (1922).  41p. 

252.  SLOOP,  MARY  T. 

Miracle  in  the  hills.  New  York:  McGraw-Hill,  1953.  232p. 

"A  very  personal  story  of  Dr.  Mary  Sloop  and  her  husband  .  .  .  covering  more 
than  forty  years  in  the  North  Carolina  Mountains." 

253.  TATE,  LELAND  B. 

The  health  and  medical-care  situation  in  rural  Virginia.  Virginia  Agricultural 
Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  363,  1944.  51p. 

254.  TIFFANY,  E.  L. 

Selling  health  in  the  mountains.  Public  Health  Nursing  31:89-92    1939. 

28 


255.  TUSKEGEE  INSTITUTE.  RURAL  LIFE  COUNCIL 

Health  care  services  and  facilities  in  the  Southern  Appalachian  region.  1955. 
30p. 

256.  WHARTON,   MAY   C. 

Doctor  woman  of  the  Cumberlands.  Pleasant  Hills,  Tennessee,  1953.  208p. 

257.  WHEELER,  LESTER  R. 

Changes  in  the  dietary  habits  of  remote  mountain  people  since  1900.  Journal 
of  the  Tennessee  Academy  of  Sciences.   10:167-174    1935. 

258.  WHEELER,  LESTER  R. 

A  comparative  study  of  the  physical  status  of  East  Tennessee  mountain  children. 
Human  Biology  5:706-21  1933. 

259.  WHITMAN,  ROBERT  H. 

Development  of  the  health  program  for  Negroes  in  Franklin  County,  Ten- 
nessee from  1940  to  1953.  Thesis.  Tennessee  Agricultural  and  Industrial  Uni- 
versity. 1953. 

260.  WHITEMAN,  RUTH   H. 

Food  habits  of  a  sample  of  University  High  School  pupils.  Thesis.  West  Virginia 
University.  1952. 

261.  WIGGINS,  TIMOTHY 

Daughter  knows  best  .  .  .  sometimes.  ML&W.  Winter    1959   31-34. 

A  short  play  on  the  subject  of  diabetes  written  especially  for  adults  with  limited 
reading  ability. 

262.  WILLEFORD,  MARY  B. 

Income  and  health  in  remote  rural  areas;  a  study  of  400  families  in  Leslie 
County,  Kentucky.  Ph.D.  Columbia  University.   1932. 

Periodicals 

263.  FRONTIER  NURSING  SERVICE. 

Quarterly  Bulletin.  Lexington,  Kentucky.   1925 +  . 

Devoted  to  the  work  of  the  Frontier  Nursing  Service.  Many  issues  contain  articles 
of  interest  to  the  sociologist,  folklorist  and  general  student  of  the  region. 


29 


The  Mountaineer  in  the  City 

264.  AKERS,  ELMER 

Southern  whites  in  Detroit.  Ann  Arbor,  1936(?).  83p.  Typescript. 
Study  of  the  difficulty  experienced  by  southern   whites   in   adapting  to   indus- 
trial and  urban  life. 

265.  BEERS,  HOWARD  W.  AND  CATHERINE   HEFLIN 

Rural  people  in  the  city;  a  study  of  the  socio-economic  status  of  297  families  in 
Lexington,  Kentucky.  Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  478. 
1945.  19p. 

266.  BEERS,  HOWARD  W.  AND  CATHERINE  HEFLIN 

The  urban  status  of  rural  migrants.  Social  Forces  23:32-37    1944. 
Study  of  farm-reared  residents  of  Lexington,  Kentucky. 

267.  BEYNON,  ERDMANN 

The  southern  white  laborer  migrates  to  Michigan.  American  Sociological  Review 
3:333-43    1938. 

268.  BUCHANAN,  MARGARET   T. 

The  migration  of  workers  from  Tennessee  to  Michigan.  Thesis.  Yanderbilt  Uni- 
versity.  1940. 

269.  CALDWELL,  MORRIS  G. 

Adjustments  of  mountain  families  in  an  urban  environment.  Social  Forces 
16:389-95    1938. 

"Sample  consists  of  57  mountain  families  from  26  mountain  counties  in  eastern 
and  southeastern  Kentucky,  who  have  moved  to  Lexington,  Kentucky." 

270.  CINCINNATI.   MAYOR'S   FRIENDLY    RELATIONS    COMMITTEE 
Report  of  a  workshop  on  the  southern  mountaineers  in  Cincinnati.  Ap  29,  1954. 
48p.  proc. 

Ppl-14  consist  of  "  edited  transcript  of  comments  by  Dr.  Roscoe  Giffin." 

271.  COLLINS,  WILLIAM 

From  the  freedom  of  the  mountains  to  the  hurly-burly  city.  nd.  8p. 

A  reprint  in  pamphlet  form  of  a  series  of  articles  in  the  Cincinnati  Inquirer  on 
the  problems  of  the  southern  migrant  in  Cincinnati. 

272.  DAVIS,  D.   H. 

Urban  development  in  the  Kentucky  mountains.  Association  American  Geo- 
graphers. Annals  15:92-99    1915. 

273.  FREEDMAN,  RONALD 

Recent  migration  into  Chicago.  Chicago:  University  of  Chicago  Press,  1950.  222p. 

274.  GIFFIN,  ROSCOE 

From  Cinder  Hollow  to  Cincinnati.  ML&W  32:4    1956    11-20. 

275.  GIFFIN,  ROSCOE 

Newcomers  from  the  Southern  Mountains.  In  Institute  on  Cultural  Patterns  of 
Newcomers.  Chicago:  Welfare  Council  of  Metropolitan  Chicago,  1957.  pp  15-40. 
Commentary  based  on  an  analytical  tabulation  of  major  characteristics  of 
southern  mountain  culture,  of  urban  life,  of  responses  of  newcomers  from  the 
mountains  to  the  city,  and  some  suggested  ways  of  coping  with  the  responses. 

276.  HEFLIN,  CATHERINE  P. 

Socio-economic  adjustments  of  rural  migrants  in  Lexington.  Thesis.  University 
of  Kentucky.  1944. 

277.  HEFLIN,  CATHERINE  P.  AND  HOWARD  W.  BEERS 

Urban  adjustments  of  rural  migrants;  a  study  of  297  families  in  Lexington, 
Kentucky,  1942.  Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  487,  1946. 
32p. 

30 


Library 


278.  HUNDLEY,  JOHN  R. 

The  mountain  man  in  northern  industry.  ML&W  31:2    1955    33-38. 

A  discussion,  from  the  employers  viewpoint,  of  the  problems  of  adjustment 
facing  workers  from  the  Appalachian  region  who  seek  employment  in  northern 
industry.  The  author  is  Director  of  Industrial  Relations  and  Personnel  at  the 
Granite  City  Steel  Co. 

279.  KILLIAN,   LEWIS   M. 

The  adjustment  of  southern  white  migrants  to  northern  urban  norms.  Social 
Forces  32:66-9    1953. 

280.  KILLIAN,  LEWIS   M. 

The  effects  of  southern  white  workers  on  race  relations  in  northern  plants. 
American  Sociological  Review   17:327-31     1952. 

"The  southern  whites  studied  were  members  of  many  small  'clusters'  of  mi- 
grants concentrated  in  .  .  .  the  near  west  side  of  Chicago." 

281.  KILLIAN,  LEWIS  M. 

Southern  white  laborers  in  Chicago's  West  Side.  Ph.D.  University  of  Chicago. 
1949. 

282.  LEYBOURNE,  G.  C. 

Urban    adjustments    of    migrants    from    Southern    Appalachian    plateaus.    Social 
Forces  16:238-46  1937. 
Study  made  in  Cincinnati. 

283.  MAXWELL,  JAMES  A. 

Down  from  the  hills  and  into  the  slums.  Reporter  D   13,  1956    27-29. 

Problems  of  migrant  mountaineers  in  urban  industrial  areas  of  the  Midwest. 

283 A.    MYERS,  JAMES 

The  mountaineer  in  industry.  ML&W  Jl   1930  7-13. 

284.  SLOTKIN,  JAMES  S. 

From  field  to  factory;  new  industrial  employees.  Glencoe,  Illinois:  Free  Press, 
1960.  156p. 

A  wide-ranging  study  of  the  acculturation  process  among  new  industrial  em- 
ployees recruited  from  "backward"  areas.  A  factory  near  Chicago  employing 
whites  from  the  Southern  Appalachians  was  studied. 

285.  SMITH,  ELDON  D. 

Migration  and  adjustment  experiences  of  rural  migrant  workers  in  Indianapolis. 
Ph.D.  University  of  Wisconsin.    1953. 

Much  material  on  the  job  satisfactions  of  southern  mountaineers. 

286.  VOTAW,  ALBERT  N. 

Hillbillies  invade  Chicago.  Harpers    216  F.   1958    61-67. 

"The  city's  toughest  integration  problem  has  nothing  to  do  with  Negroes.  It 
involves  a  small  army  of  white,  Protestant,  Early  American  migrants  from  the 
south— who  are  usually  proud,  poor,  primitive,  and  fast  with  a  knife." 


31 


Population  Changes,  Migration 

287.  BEERS,  HOWARD  W. 

Effects  of  war  on  farm  population  in  Kentucky.  Kentucky  Agricultural  Experi- 
ment Station.  Bulletin  456,  1944.  24p. 

288.  BEERS,  HOWARD  W. 

Growth  of  population  in  Kentucky,  1860-1940.  Kentucky  Agricultural  Experi- 
ment Station.  Bulletin  422,  1942.  24p. 

289.  BEERS,  HOWARD  W. 

Mobility  of  rural  population.  Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin 
505,  1947.  43p. 

"Study  of  changes  in  residence  and  occupation  in  two  types  of  rural  communi- 
ties." Johnson  and  Robertson  counties. 

290.  BREAZEALE,  NORMA  J. 

Association  of  selected  socio-economic  characteristics  with  net  migration  from 
three  Kentucky  economic  areas,  1920-1950.  Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky.  1958. 
Two  of  the  areas  are  in  the  Southern  Appalachian  area. 

291.  BROWN,  JAMES  S. 

Basic  population  data  for  the  Southern  Appalachians,  by  state,  economic  area 
and  metropolitan  area.  Lexington:  University  of  Kentucky  Social  Research 
Service,  1958.  65p. 

292.  BROWN,  JAMES  S. 

The  changing  Highlands  population.  ML&W.  Spring  1953.  42-43. 

293.  BROWN,  JAMES  S.  AND  RALPH  J.  RAMSEY 

The  changing  Kentucky  population;  a  summary  of  population  data  for  coun- 
ties. Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Progress  Report  67,  1958.  74p. 
Includes  much  valuable  data  on  population,  migration,  education,  religion,  etc. 

294.  BROWN,  JAMES  S.  AND  HOWARD  W.  BEERS 

Rural  population  changes  in  five  Kentucky  mountain  districts,  1943  to  1946. 
Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.   Bulletin   532,   1949.  46p. 

295.  CLEVINGER,  WOODROW  R. 

Southern  Appalachian  Highlanders  in  western  Washington.  Pacific  Northivest 
Quarterly  33:3-25    1942. 

"Approximately  15,000  western  Washington  mountaineers  are  immigrants  or 
the  Washington-born  children  of  immigrants  from  the  southern  Appalachian 
region."  Lists  "families  and  clans"  prominent  in  the  migrations. 

296.  COMBS,  JERRY  W. 

Population  migration  in  the  State  of  Tennessee.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee. 
1948. 

297.  DANLEY,  ROBERT  A. 

Population  estimates  for  Kentucky  counties  and  economic  areas,  July   1,   1958. 
Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Progress  Report  79,   1959.   17p. 
Progress  Report  66  presents  the  same  information  as  of  July  1,  1957. 

298.  DODSON,  L.  S. 

Living  conditions  and  population  migration  in  four  Appalachian  counties. 
Washington:  Farm  Security  Administration,  1937.  152p.  (Social  Research  Re- 
port No.  3). 

Counties  are:  Avery  &  Haywood  Counties.  North  Carolina;  Magoffin  &  Morgan 
Counties,  Kentucky. 

299.  GARNER,  ALTO  L. 

Migration   of   notables    to  and    from    the   Southeast.    Ed.D.    University   of    Ken- 
tucky. 1954. 
"A  notable  being  defined  as  one  listed  in  Who's  IV ho  in  America  1952-53." 

32 


300.  GRAY,  W.  T. 

Population  movements  in  the  Kentucky  mountains,  Rural  Sociology  10:380-386 
1945. 

301.  HANNA,  MARGARET 

The  drain  of  talent  out  of  Georgia  and  South  Carolina.  Thesis.  Rent  State  Uni- 
versity. 1957. 

Who's  Who  In  America  served  as  a  base  for  this  study.  Not  broken  down  by 
county. 

302.  HARRIS,  GEORGE  E. 

The  drain  of  talent  out  of  Ohio  and  Kentucky.  Thesis.  Kent  State  University. 

1956. 

Who's  Who  In  America  served  as  a  base  for  this  study.  Not  broken  down   by 

county. 

303.  HEBERLE,  RUDOLF 

The  impact  of  the  war  on  population  redistribution  in  the  South.  Vanderbilt 
University.  Institute  of  Research  &  Training  in  the  Social  Sciences.  Paper  No.  7, 
1945.  64p. 

"While  the  whole  southeast  is  the  subject  of  the  study,  the  more  detailed 
analysis  will  be  limited  to  five  states:  Louisiana,  Arkansas,  Mississippi,  Tennessee, 
and  Alabama." 

304.  HITT,  HOMER  L. 

Migration  between  the  South  and  other  regions,  1949  to  1950.  Social  Forces 
36:9-16    1957. 

305.  HITT,  HOMER  L. 

Population  movements  in  the  southern  United  States.  Scientific  Monthly  82:241-46 
My.  1956. 

305A.    HUTCHISON,  ROBERT  S. 

Migration  and  industrial  development  in  Tennessee.  Nashville:  Tennessee 
Legislative  Council,  1958.  292p.  proc. 

A  report  to  the  Industrial  Development  and  Migration  Subcommittee  of  the 
Tennessee  Legislative  Council.  The  report  contains  much  useful  statistical 
information.   There  are  breakdowns  by  county  and  economic  areas. 

306.  JOHNSON,  RAYBURN 

Population  trends  in  Tennessee  from  1940  to  1950.  Tennessee  Historical 
Quarterly  11:254-62    1952. 

307.  KNICELY,  HOWARD 

Characteristics  of  mobile  workers  in  a  rural  industrialized  community.  Thesis. 
University  of  West  Virginia.  1960. 

Study  of  workers  attracted  to  the  Ravenswood,  W.  Va.  area  by  the  establish- 
ment of  new  plants. 

308.  LAING,  JAMES  T. 

The  drain  of  talent  out  of  the  Virginias.  Proceedings  of  the  West  Virginia  Aca. 

demy  of  Science  XII    (1938)    132-36. 

Based  on  Who's  Who  in  America.    Not  divided  by  county. 

309.  LAING,  JAMES  T. 

A  further  note  on  the  drain  of  talent  out  of  the  Virginias.  Proceedings  of  the 
West  Virginia  Academy  of  Science  XIII    (1939)    92-96. 

310.  LARSON,  O.  F. 

Wartime  migration  and  the  manpower  reserve  on  farms  in  eastern  Kentucky. 
Rural  Sociology  8:141-61   1943. 

311.  LUEBKE,  B.   H.   AND  JOHN   F.   HART 

Migration  from  a  Southern  Appalachian  community.  Land  Economics  34:44-53. 

1958. 

Study  made  in  Jefferson  County,  Tennessee. 

33 


312.  MANGRUM,  CLAUDE  THOMAS,  Jr. 

The  drain  of  talent  out  of  North  Carolina  and  Tennessee.  Thesis.  Kent  State 
University.  1958. 

Who's  Who  In  America  served  as  the  basis  for  this  study.  Not  broken  down  by 
country. 

313.  MARSCHNER,  FRANCIS  J. 

Rural  population  density  in  the  Southern  Appalachians.  Washington:  GOP, 
1940.  18p.    (USDA  Miscellaneous  Publication  367). 

314.  MASON,  MARIE  AND  C.  PAUL  MARSH 

Migration  within  Kentucky.  Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin 
620,  1954.  23p. 

315.  MAULDIN,  W.  PARKER 

Selective  migration  from  small  towns.  American  Sociological  Revieiv  5:748-58 
1940. 

316.  MOSS,  J.  JOEL 

West  Virginia  and  her  population.  West  Virginia  Agricultural  Experiment 
Station.  Bulletin  403,  1957.  51p. 

317.  OYLER,  MERTON  D. 

Fertility  rates  and  migration  of  Kentucky  population,   1920-1940,  as   related   to 
communication,  income  and  education.  Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment  Sta- 
tion. Bulletin  469,  1944.  43p. 
By  county. 

318.  OYLER,  MERTON  D. 

Neighborhood  standing  and  population  changes  in  Johnson  and  Robertson 
Counties,  Kentucky.  Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  523, 
1948.  48p. 

319.  OLYER,  MERTON   D. 

Natural  increase  and  migration  of  Kentucky  population,  1920-1935.  Kentucky 
Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  395,  1939. 

320.  PITCHER,  JUNE  DICKERSON 

Occupational  status  and  reasons  for  leaving  the  state  of  West  Virginia:  gradu- 
ates of  Division  of  Home  Economics,  West  Virginia  University,  1932-1952. 
Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.   1955. 

321.  SIZER,  LEONARD  M. 

Population  changes  in  West  Virginia,  1900-1950.  West  Virginia  Agricultural 
Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  401,  1957.  8  p. 

322.  SMITH,  ELDON   D. 

Nonfarm  employment  information  for  rural  people.  Journal  of  Farm  Economics 
38:813-27    1956. 

A  study  of  the  sources  of  job  information  among  migrant  workers  in  Indiana- 
polis. Southern  whites  (largely  from  Kentucky  and  Tennessee)  had  poor  sources 
of  information. 

323.  SOMERS,  GERALD  G. 

Mobility  of  chemical  workers  in  a  coal  mining  area.  Morgantown:  West  Virginia 

University,  1954.  41p.    (West  Virginia  University  Business  and  Economic  Studies 

3:2). 

Study  based  on  "a  survey  of  the   work   histories,  from    1940   to   1952,   of    1,015 

employees  of  a  chemical  manufacturing  plant  in   Monongalia." 

324.  SPAULDING,  IRVING  A.  AND  HOWARD  W.  BEERS 

Mobility  and  fertility  rates  of  rural  families  in  Robertson  and  Johnson  Coun- 
ties, Kentucky,  1918-1941.  Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin 
451,  1943.  20  p. 

325.  STODTBECK,  FRED 

Migration  from  Kentucky;  a  study  of  intervening  opportunities.  Thesis.  Indiana 
University.  1942. 

34 


326.  STURGIS,   DUDLEY  C. 

Standard  of  living  and  migration  of  136  hum  families  in  Overton  County,  Ten- 
nessee. Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.  1936. 

327.  U.  S.  CONGRESS.  HOUSE 

Select  Committee  to  Investigate  the  Interstate  Migration  of  Destitute  Citizens. 
Washington:   GOP,   1940-41.   10  volumes. 

An  exhaustive  study  of  the  subject.  No  one  volume  is  devoted  entirely  to 
migration  from  the  Southern  Appalachians.  However,  parts  2  (Montgomery) 
and  3   (Chicago)  contain  much  of  value.  Index  for  the  whole  in  Part    10. 

328.  WILLIAMS,  ROBIN  M.  AND  HOWARD  W.  BEERS 

Attitudes  toward  rural  migration  and  family  life  in  Johnson  and  Robertson 
Counties,  Kentucky,  1941.  Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin 
452,  1943.  40p. 


35 


Coal  Mines  and  Miners 


lUIU.ICX.RAPHY 


329.  WADLEIGH,  FRANCIS  R. 

A  list  of  books  and  other  sources  of  information  regarding  coal  and  coal  pro- 
ducts. Washington:  W.  F.  Roberts,  1935.  63p. 

References  in  English  on  all  aspects  of  coal-technology,  economics,  labor  rela- 
tions, etc. 

GENERAL  STUDIES  AND  HISTORY 

330.  CHAPMAN,  MARY  L. 

The  influence  of  coal  in  the  Big  Sandy  Valley.  Ph.D.  University  of  Kentucky, 
1945. 

331.  CONLEY,   PHIL 

History  of  the  West  Virginia  coal  industry.  Charleston:  Educational  Foundation, 
1960.  3 lip. 

Bibliography  pp297-308. 

332.  ERNST,  HARRY  W.  AND  CHARLES  DRAKE 

Poor,  proud  and  primitive.  Nation,  188:490-93.   1959. 

Deals  largely  with  the  depressed  coal  areas  of  southern  West  Virginia.  (Re- 
printed in  ML&W  35:3    1959,  under  the  title:  Region  in  need). 

333.  FRISCH,  ISADORE 

Twentieth  century  development  of  the  coal  mining  industry  in  eastern  Kentucky 
and  its  influence  upon  political  behavior  of  the  area.  Thesis.  LUiiversity  of  Ken- 
tucky. 1938. 

224.    GRIFFIN,  GERALD 

The  truth  about  eastern  Kentucky.  ML&W  31:4    1955    17-24. 

A  discussion  of  the  economic  and  social  conditions  in  the  coal  fields  of  eastern 
Kentucky. 

335.    JILLISON,  WILLARD   R. 

The  coal  industry  in  Kentucky.  Frankfort,  1924.  164p. 
(Kentucky  Geological  Survey.   Geologic   Reports  v20). 

Contains  much  information  on  mining  history,  statistics,  lists  of  coal  companies, 
etc. 

33G.    MORRIS,  HOMER  L. 

The  plight  of  the  bituminous  coal  miner.  Philadelphia:  University  of  Penn- 
sylvania Press,  1934.  253p. 

Study  is  centered  chiefly  in  the  coal  fields  of  Kentucky  and  West  Virginia. 

337.  MORY,  SAMUEL  A. 

History  of  coal  mining  in  Laurel  County,  Kentucky,  1750  to  1944.  London,  Ky.: 
Sentinel-Echo,  1944.  16p. 

338.  PEARCE,  ALBERT 

The  growth  and  development  of  the  Kentucky  coal  industry.  Thesis.  University 
of  Kentucky.   1930. 

339.  ROSS,  MALCOLM  H. 

Machine  age  in  the  hills.  New  York:   Macmillan,  1933.  248p. 

"The  effects  of  technology  ...  in  the  coal  fields  of  Kentucky  and  West  Virginia." 

340.  VERHOEFF,  MARY 

The  Kentucky  mountains,  transportation  and  commerce,  1750-1911;  a  study  in 
the  economic  history  of  a  coal  field.  Louisville:  Filson  Club,  1911.  208p.  (Filson 
Club  Publication  26). 

36 


341.  WHITE,  ELIZABETH 

Development  of  the  bituminous  coal  mining  industry  in  Logan  County,  West 
Virginia.  Thesis.  Marshall  College.   1956. 

HEALTH-PHYSICAL    AND    MENTAL 

342.  BEEBE,   GILBERT   W. 

Differential  fertility  by  color  for  coal  miners  in  Logan  County,  West  Virginia. 
Milbank  Memorial  Fund  Quarterly  19:189-95    1941. 

343.  BUREAU  OF  COOPERATIVE  MEDICINE 

Medical  care  in  selected  areas  of  the  Appalachian  bituminous  coal  fields.  New 
York:  The  Bureau,  1939.  55p. 

Conference  on   Medical   Care   in   the   Bituminous   Coal   area. 

1st.-         1952- 

First  bears  the  title:  Medical-hospital  problems  in  the  bituminous  coal  min- 
ing areas.  Chicago:  American  Medical  Association,  1953.  26p.  (Appeared  also  in 
the  JAMA  151:407-12    1953). 

Second  bears  the  title:  Report  of  the  second  Conference  on  medical  care  in  the 
bituminous  coal  mine  area.  Chicago:   American   Medical  Association,  1953.  28p. 

344.  DRAPER,  WARREN  F. 

A  hospital  network  for  coal  miners  and  their  families.  West  Virginia  Medical 
Journal  56:70-73    1960. 

Description  of  some  of  the  medical  problems  encountered  in  the  West  Virginia- 
Tennessee-Kentucky   coal   tields. 

345.  FIELD,  LEWIS  AND  OTHERS 

Observations  on  the  relation  of  psychological  factors  to  psychiatric  illness  among 
coal  miners.  International  Journal  of  Social  Psychiatry  3:133-145    1957. 

The  authors  are  staff  members  of  the  Bluefieid,  (West  Virginia)  Mental  Health 
Center.    A  discussion  of  the  "trapped,  hopeless  life  situation"  of  the  miner. 

346.  KING,  JAMES  B.  AND  OTHERS. 

The  bituminous  coal  country;  a  psychiatric  frontier.  Mental  Health  in  Virginia. 
10:38-40    1959. 

Essentially  the  same  information  as  that  presented  by  the  same  authors  in  the 
West  Virginia  Medical  Journal  55:164-67    1959. 

347.  McGILL,  NETTIE  P. 

Welfare  of  children  in  the  bituminous  coal  mining  communities  in  West  Vir- 
ginia.   Washington:   GPO,   1923.  77p.    (Children's  Bureau   Publication   117). 

348.  MASSIE,  WILLIAM  A. 

Medical  services  for  rural  areas.  Cambridge:  Harvard  University  Press,  1957.  68p. 
Results  of  a  study  conducted  by  the  Tennessee  Medical  Foundation.  The  area 
studied  most  intensively  was  Pruden  Valley,  which  lies  in  the  northwestern 
part  of  Claiborne  County.  It  also  includes  portions  of  Campbell  County,  Ten- 
nessee and  Bell  County,  Kentucky.  The  area  has  a  population  of  6.000,  mostly 
coal  miners  and  their  families.  Other  areas  in  Tennessee  studied  were  in 
Morgan,  Grundy,  Meigs,  and  Monroe  Counties. 

349.  MILLER,  HAROLD  W. 

Characteristics  of  mining  and  non-mining  psychiatric  patients.  Thesis.  West 
Virginia  University.   1960. 

350.  MILLER,  IVA  A. 

Child  health  in  mining  camp  and  village.  ML&W  8:5-8    Ja  1933. 

350A.    NESTMANN,  RALPH  H. 

The  incidence  of  emotional  illness  in  coal  miners  in  West  Virginia.  West  Vir- 
ginia Medical  Journal  53:149-52    1956. 

351.  REYNOLDS,  JAMES  E. 

Anxiety  in  coal  miners.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.   1959. 
"Some  relevant   characteristics   of   miners   whose   conditions    were   diagnosed    as 
'Anxiety  Reaction'  in  McDowell  County,  West  Virginia,  during  the  vears   1955 
through  1957." 

37 


352.  ROSS,  W.  D.  AND  OTHERS 

Emotional  aspects  of  respiratory  disorders  among  coal  miners.  Journal  of  the 
American  Medical  Association  156:484-87    1954. 

353.  U.  S.  COAL  MINES  ADMINISTRATION 

A  medical  survey  of  the  bituminous  coal  industry.  Washington:  GOP,  1947.  244p. 

Includes  a  Supplement  to  the  Report  entitled  "The  coal  miner  and  his  family." 
A  study  of  first  importance. 

354.  WIESEL,  CARL  AND  MALCOLM  ARNY 

Psychiatric  study  of  coal  miners  in  Eastern  Kentucky  area.  American  Journal  of 
Psychiatry   108:617-24    1952. 

355.  WILLIAMS,  DORCAS  A. 

Food  habits  of  the  pupils  in  Monongahela  &  Dunbar  (West  Virginia)  High 
School  whose  parents  are  engaged  in  coal  mining.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  Uni- 
versity. 1952. 

LABOR  RELATIONS,  STRIKES 

An  enormous  amount  of  material  has  appeared  on  labor  relations  in  the 
Southern  Appalachian  coal  fields.  From  the  point  of  view  of  sheer  bulk,  1932 
and  1933  were  unquestionably  the  peak  years.  During  that  period  the  miners, 
especially  those  of  Harlan  County,  Kentucky,  were  "adopted"  by  many  liberal 
groups.  Indeed,  the  plight  of  the  miners  became  one  of  the  favorite  causes 
of  the  American  Left.  There  were  protest  meetings,  student  marches,  and 
articles  without  number.  This  interest  waned  as  suddenly  as  it  appeared,  and 
the  miners  were  left  in  substantially  the  same  position  as  before.  The  bulk  of 
the  writing  produced  during  this  era  was  highly  polemical  in  nature.  Only  the 
most  significant  articles  have  been  listed  here.  Those  interested  in  this  sub- 
ject will  find  much  material  listed  in  the  Readers  Guide  to  Periodical  Litera- 
ture for  the  period.  There  is  also  an  extensive  listing  in  Edwards  (No.  288- 
333.) 

356.  AMERICAN  CIVIL  LIBERTIES  UNION 

The  Kentucky  miners'  struggle.  New  York:  The  Union,  1932.  23p. 

357.  BARB,  JOHN   MILLIKEN 

Strikes  in  the  southern  West  Virginia  coal  field,  1912-1922.  Thesis.  West  Vir- 
ginia University.  1949. 

358.  BLIZZARD,  WILLIAM  C. 

There's  never  peace  in  West  Virginia's  hills.  Nation   177:548-9    1953. 
Description  of  conditions  in  Widen,  West  Virginia. 

359.  BRECKINRIDGE,  DESHA  AND  OTHERS 

Kentucky  editors  look  at  Kentucky.  Nation  134:571-73    1932. 

Letters  by  editors  of  Kentucky  newspapers  regarding  the  trouble  In  Bell  and 
Harlan  Counties. 

360.  BYARS,  J.  C,  Jr. 

Harlan  County;  act  of  God?  Nation  134:672-74    1932. 

361.  CARRITT,  G. 

American  students  and  Kentucky  gunmen.  New  Statesman  and  Natioji    3:703-4 
1932. 

Short  account  of  the  expedition  of  the  National  Student  League  to  the  Kentucky 
coal  fields. 

362.  COLEMAN,   McALISTER 

Men  and  coal.  New  York:  Farrar  &  Rinehart,  1943.  350p. 

Deals  largely  with  labor  relations  and  working  conditions  in  the  coal  in- 
dustry. Part  of  the  "Labor  in  Twentieth  Century  America"  series. 

363.  COWLEY,  MALCOLM 

Kentucky  coal  town.  New  Republic  70:67-70  1932. 

Town  is  Pineville.  Replies  to  this  articles  appeared  in  the  same  journal,  issues 

of  Mr  30,  My  18. 

38 


364.  CRAWFORD,  CHARLES  B. 

The  mine  war  on  Cabin  Creek  and  Paint  Creek,  West  Virginia  in  1912-13. 
Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky.   1939. 

365.  EMMET,  BORIS 

Labor  relations  in  the  Fairmont,  West  Virginia  bituminous  coal  fields.  Washing- 
ton: GOP,  1924.  86p.    (Bureau  of  Labor  Statistics.  Bulletin  361). 

366.  HACKAMACK,  LAWRENCE  C. 

Cooperation-conflict  in  labor-management  relations;  a  study  of  contrasting  cases 
(women's  garment  industry  and  bituminous  coal  industry).  Ann  Arbor:  Uni- 
versity Microfilms,    1956.    (Ph.D.  dissertation   at   the   State   University   of   Iowa). 

367.  HUTSON,  ANDREW  C. 

The  coal  miner's  insurrection,  1891-92.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.  1933. 

Protest  among  East  Tennessee  miners  against  the  use  of  convict  labor  in  mines. 

368.  HUTSON,  ANDREW  C. 

The  coal  miner's  insurrections  of  1891  in  Anderson  County,  Tennessee.  East 
Tennessee  Historical  Society.  Publication  7     (1935)    103-121. 

369.  LANE,  WINTHROP  D. 

Civil  war  in  West  Virginia;  a  story  of  the  industrial  conflict  in  the  coal  mines. 
New  York:  Huebusch,  1921.  128p.    (On  cover:  The  Freeman  Pamphlets). 

370.  LEE,  JENNIE 

Kentucky  through  English  eyes.  Living  Age  342:184-85  1932. 

"Of  all  the  God-forsaken  spots  1  have  yet  visited,  American  mining  camps  are 
certainly   the  worst." 

371.  LINTON,  RON   M. 

Kentucky's  tragic  strike.  Nation    188:471-3    1959. 

37ia.  Mccormick,  kyle 

The  New  Kanawha  River  and  the  mine  war  of  West  Virginia.  Charleston: 
Matthews  Printing  Co.,  1959.  176p. 

372.  McGOLDRICK,  JOSEPH 

College  students  and  Kentucky  miners.  American  Scholar  1:363-65    1932. 

The  expulsion  of  "invading"  students  by  the  authorities  of  east  Kentucky  min- 
ing counties. 

373.  MORONY,  IVES  GUY 

Attitude  of  coal  miners  toward  union  and  coal  industry.  Thesis.  West  Vir- 
ginia University.  1959. 

Study  made  in  northern  West  Virginia. 

374.  NATIONAL  COMMITTEE  FOR  THE  DEFENSE  OF  POLITICAL  PRISONERS 
Harlan  miners  speak;  report  on  terrorism  in  the  Kentucky  coal  fields.  New 
York:   Harcourt,  Brace,  1932.  348p. 

The  famous  report  by  Theodore  Dreiser,  Anna  Rochester,  etc. 

375.  NIEBUHR,  REINHOLD 

Religion  and  the  class  war  in  Kentucky.  Christian  Century  49:637-8    1932. 

Report  of  a  visit  to  Pineville,  Kentucky. 

375A.    PERRY,  VERNON  F. 

The  labor  struggle  at  Wilder,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  Vanderbilt.   1934. 

376.  SOMERS,  GERALD  G. 

Grievance  settlement  in  coal  mining.  Morgantown:  West  Virginia  University, 
1956.  44p.    (West  Virginia   University  Business  and  Economic  Studies  4:4). 

377.  SPERO,  STERLING  D.,  AND  JACOB  ARONOFF 

War  in  the  Kentucky  mountains.  American  Mercury  25:226-33    1932. 

Harlan  County. 

39 


378.  TAYLOR,  PAUL  F. 

The  coal  mine  war  in  Harlan  County,  Kentucky,  1931-32.  Thesis.  University 
of  Kentucky.  1955. 

379.  THOMPSON,  CRAIG 

Reign  of  terror  at  Widen,  West  Virginia.  Saturday  Evening  Post  F  20,  1954    17-19. 

380.  UNITED    STATES   CONGRESS.    SENATE. 

Committee  on  Education  and  Labor.  West  Virginia  Coal  Fields.  Washington: 
GPO,  1921.  2  volumes. 

".  .  .  to  investigate  the  recent  acts  of  violence  in  the  coal  fields  of  West  Vir- 
ginia and  adjacent  territory." 

381.  UNITED  STATES  CONGRESS.   SENATE. 

Committee  on  Interstate  Commerce.  Conditions  in  the  coal  fields  of  Pennsyl- 
vania, West  Virginia,  and  Ohio.  Washington:   GPO,  1928.  2  volumes. 

381A.    WEST  VIRGINIA.   GOVERNOR'S  INVESTIGATING   COMMITTEE. 

Report  and  Proceedings  of  Widen  Strike  Committee.  Charleston,  1953.  184p. 
(Appears  in  West  Virginia  House  of  Delegates.  Journal.  Mr  2,  1953). 

LIFE  IN  THE  COAL  COUNTRY 

382.  AHRENHOLZ,  GLADYS  TELLEEN 

Factors  affecting  social  participation  in  coal  communities.  Thesis.  West  Vir- 
ginia University.   1951. 

383.  AMERICAN,  CONSTITUTIONAL  ASSOCIATION 

Life  in  a  West  Virginia  coal  field.  Charleston,  West  Virginia,   1923.  58p. 

Written  to  refute  "scurrilous  articles"  which  have  depicted  the  coal  fields  as 
"an  island  of  barbarity  in  a  sea  of  civilization." 

384.  BALL,  RICHARD  A. 

The  Southern  Appalachian  coal  community;  an  explorative  study.  Thesis.  West 
Virginia  University.  1960. 

385.  BARNES,  CLARENCE  E. 

The  pattern  and  nature  of  the  informal  and  formal  institutional  contacts 
participated  in  by  residents  of  New  Hill.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1952. 

New  Hill  is  a  small  mining  community  in   north-central  West  Virginia. 

386.  BROSKY,  A.  F. 

Building  a  town  for  a  mountain  community.  Coal  Age  23:560-63    1923. 

Description  of  the  "model"  coal  mining  town  of  Jenkins,  Kentucky. 

387.  CRAWFORD,  BRUCE 

Piney  Ridge,  Virginia.  Virginia  Quarterly  Revieiv  8:371-84    1932. 

Description  of  life  in  a  coal  mining  area  near  the  Kentucky  border. 

388.  CRESSEY,  PAUL  FREDERICK 

Social  disorganization  and  reorganization  in  Harlan  County,  Kentucky.  Ameri- 
can Sociological  Review   14:389-94    1949. 

389.  DOTSON,  JOHN  A. 

The  public  school  in  the  mining  community.  Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky. 
1931. 

390.  EDWARDS,  J.  H. 

Helping  man  and  family.  Coal  Age  49.  D.   1944    86-93. 

Describes  efforts  of  the  Jewell  Ridge  Coal  Company  to  make  the  coal  towns 
"better  places  in  which  to  live"  and  "  to  raise  the  employees  esteem  of  his  job." 
Area  located  in  the  coal  fields  of  southern  Virginia,  near  Bluefield,  West  Vir- 
ginia. 

391.  ELLIS,  MABEL  BROWN 

Children  of  the  Kentucky  coal  fields.  American  Child  1:285-405    1920. 

40 


392.  FRENCH,  JACK 

Segregation   patterns   in   a   coal  camp.   Thesis.   West   Virginia    University.    1953. 

393.  GLADDEN,  JAMES  W.,  and  JOHN  R.  CHRISTIANSEN 

Emergence   of   urban    values    in    mining    families    in    eastern    Kentucky.    Rural 
Sociology  21:135-39  1956. 

394.  HOFFMAN,  BETTY  HANNAH 

Meet   a   soft-coal   miner's   family   of   Harlan    County,    Kentucky.    Ladies    Home 
Journal  Mr    1947   225-32. 

395.  HOLLANDSWORTH.  GENEVIEVE 

Youth  recreation  in  the  coal  mining  towns  of  West  Virginia.  Thesis.  West  Vir- 
ginia University.  1948. 

396.  KORSON,  GEORGE  G. 

Black  land;  the  way  of  life  in  the  coal  fields.  Evanston,  Illinois:   Row,  Peterson, 
1941.  72p. 

397.  LIVINGSTON,  WILLIAM  J. 

Coal  miners  and  religion.  Thesis.  Union  Theological  Seminary.   1951. 

Research  was  done  in  Logan  County,  West  Virginia. 

398.  MARJA,  FERN 

Forgotten   children:    the  West   Virginia  story.   Title   of   a   series   of  six    articles 
appearing  in  the  New  York  Post  F  22  to  F  28    1960. 

399.  MINARD,  RALPH  D. 

Race  relationships  in  the  pocahontas  Coal  Field.  Journal  of  Social  Issues  8:29-44 

1952. 

Study  centered  "in   that  part  of  the  coal  field   included   in    McDowell   County, 

West  Virginia." 

400.  MORRIS,  THOMAS  JOHN 

The  coal  camp:  a  pattern  of  limited  community  life.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  Uni- 
versity.  1950. 

401.  MURPHY,  R.  E. 

A   Southern    West   Virginia    mining   community.    Economic    Geography    9:51-59 
1933. 

402.  NORTHRUP,  HERBERT  R. 

The   Negro   and    the    United    Mine   Workers   of    America.    Southern    Economic 
Journal  9:313-26    1943. 

403.  PARKER,  RUTH  L. 

With  the  Friends  in  the  coal  fields.  ML&W  O  1932   3-10. 

Activities  of  the  American   Friends  Service  Committee   in   relieving  distress   in 
the  coal  fields. 

404.  RICH,  MARK 

Some  churches  of  coal  mining  communities  of  West  Virginia.  New  York,   1951. 

62p. 

Survey  sponsored  by  the  West  Virginia  Council  of  Churches  &  the  Committee 

for  Cooperative  Field  Research. 

405.  ROGERS,  JACK 

I  remember  that  mining  town.   West   Virginia  Review  15:203-5    1938. 

Vivid  description  of   life  in   a   West   Virginia   mine   camp   during   the   author's 
boyhood. 

406.  STRONG,  EDNA  R. 

A  sociological  analysis  of  ecology,  structure  and  processes  in  a  Virginia  coal  min- 
ing community.    Thesis.  Louisiana  State  University.   1943. 

41 


407.  UNSIGNED 

Two  counties  mine  coal  the  hard  way.  Business  Week.  S  12,  1953    90-94. 
Description  of  the  small  non-union  mines  in  Leslie  and  Clay  counties  Kentucky. 

408.  WARBURTON,  AMBER  A. 

Guidance  in  a  rural-industrial  community;  Harlan  County,  a  Kentucky  coal 
mining  district,  plans  with  and  for  its  boys  and  girls.  Washington:  National 
Educational   Association,    1954.    249p. 

409.  WILLIAMS,  L.  M. 

Transformation  of  a  coal  mining  town.  Mining  Congress  Journal  Ag.  1943   37-40. 

Describes  the  improvement  of  Wheelwright,  Kentucky,  as  the  result  of  a  com- 
munity improvement  program  of  the  Inland  Steel  Company. 

410.  WILLIAMS,  STANLEY  B. 

Disorganization  and  delinquency  in  three  coal  communities.  Thesis.  West  Vir- 
ginia University.   1954. 

ECONOMICS 

There  is  a  voluminous  literature  on  the  economic  problems  of  the  coal  in- 
dustry. It  is  beyond  the  scope  of  this  work  to  attempt  a  bibliography  of  the 
industry  as  a  whole.  Only  titles  having  a  direct  bearing  on  the  Southern 
Appalachian  area  as  such  are  listed  below.  The  bibliographies  included  in 
most  of  these  works  will  prove  helpful  to  those  interested  in  other  aspects 
of  the  subject.  Students  should  also  consult  Wadleigh  (329)  for  material  appear- 
ing before  1935.  By  far  the  most  detailed  history  of  the  industry  is  Howard  N. 
Eavenson's  The  First  Century  a?id  a  Quarter  of  American  Coal  Industry  (Pitts- 
burgh: Privately  Printed,  1942.  701p).  This  work  contains  an  exhaustive 
bibliography  (pp621-64).  Statistical  information  may  be  obtained  from  such 
sources  as  Minerals  Yearbook,  Saivard's  Annual  or  Bituminous  Coal  Facts. 

411.  BACKMAN,  JULES 

Bituminous  coal  wages,  profits,  and  productivity,  n.p.  1950.   128p. 

"Prepared  for  Southern  Coal  Producers  Association." 

412.  BUCHANAN,  JOHN  A. 

A  survey  of  labor  requirements  in  northern  West  Virginia  coal  mines  in  1957. 
Thesis.  West  Virginia  University  1960. 

413.  FISHER,  WALDO  E. 

Economic  consequences  of  the  seven-hour  day  and  wage  changes  in  the  bitum- 
inous coal  industry.  Philadelphia:  1939.  130p.  (Half-title:  Industrial  Research 
Department,  Wharton  School  of  Finance  &  Commerce,  University  of  Penn- 
sylvania.  Research   Studies  XXXII). 

414.  GREENSLADE,  RUSH  V. 

The  economic  effects  of  collective  bargaining  in  bituminous  coal  mining.  Ph.D. 
University  of  Chicago.  1952. 

415.  HURST,  THOMAS  E. 

Tennessee  coal  mining  and  marketing  trends.  Thesis.  ETSC.  1951. 

416.  LEBUS,  WILLIAM  F.  Jr. 

Economic  data  on  eastern  Kentucky  coal  field.  Frankfort:  Agricultural  &  In- 
dustrial Development  Board  of  Kentucky,   1956.   32p.   proc. 

416A.    MERRILL,  WILLIAM  M. 

Economics  of  the  southern  smokeless  coals.   Ph.D.    University   of  Illinois.    1953. 

417.  NEWHOUSE,  JOSEPH 

Labor  cost  in  the  bituminous  coal  industry.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University. 
1951. 

418.  ROUSE,  ELAINE 

Union  economic  policies  and  union  discipline  in  the  bituminous  wage  dispute 
of  1949-1950.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1953. 

42 


419.  SCOTT,  GEORCE  H. 

A  study  of  the  United  Mine  Workers  of  America  Welfare  and  Retirement  Fund. 
Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.   1951. 

420.  SOMERS,  GERAUD  G. 

Effects  of  North-South  wage  uniformity  on  southern  coal  production.  Southern 
Economic  Journal.  20:121-29    1953 

421.  THOMPSON,  JAMES    H. 

Significant   trends  in  the  West   Virginia   coal   industry,   1900-1957.   Morgantown: 
West    Virginia    University,    1958    G5p.     (West    Virginia     University     Business    & 
Economic  Studies  6:1). 
Devoted  largely  to  statistics  on   production,  employment,   wages,  accidents,  etc. 

422.  WHITE  THOMAS  E. 

Development  and  operation  of  the  welfare  and  retirement  fund  in  the  bitumin- 
ous coal  industry.  Ph.D.  University  of  Pittsburgh.  1954. 

MISCELLANEOUS 

423.  ALLRED,  CHARLES  E.  AND  OTHERS 

Grundy  County,  Tennessee;  relief  in  a  coal  mining  community.  Tennessee 
Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Report    11,   1936. 

424.  BAILEY,  C4ROL 

Training  for  coal  miners  in  cooperation  with  the  public  schools  of  Tennessee. 
Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.   1952. 

425.  BENDALL,  JOHN  WENTWORTH 

A  study  of  the  Minnesota  multiphasic  personality  inventory  and  its  use  in 
identification  of  acceptable  mine  foremen.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1955. 

426.  BOTT,  MATTHIAS  WHITFIELD 

Some  aspects  of  the  coal  mining  industry  in  Monongalia  County,  West  Virginia. 
Thesis.  West  Virginia   University.   1949. 

427.  DUFF,  FRANK 

Government  in  an  eastern  Kentucky  coal  field  countv.  Thesis.  University  of 
Kentucky.   1950. 

428.  DURRETT  HAROLD  L. 

A  validation  study  of  a  psychogical  test  battery  for  selection  of  Joy  ripper-type 
continuous  miner  operators.  Thesis.  West   Virginia   University.   I960. 

429.  KENTUCKY.   LEGISLATIVE  RESEARCH   COMMISSION 

Strip  mining;  a  1954  Kentucky  legislative  problem.  Frankfurt,  1954.  (Legislative 
Researh  Commission.   Information   Bulletin    10). 

430.  KENWORTHY,  WILMER  E. 

First  aid  to  soft  coal— then  a  major  operation.  MLirW  Ap    1933    1-6. 

431.  KORSON,  GEORGE  G. 

Coal  dust  on  the  fiddle:  songs  and  stories  of  the  bituminous  industry.  Phila- 
delphia:   University  of  Pennsylvania   Press,   1943.  460p. 

432.  MORONY,  IVES  G. 

Attitudes  of  coal  miners  toward  union  and  coal  industry.  Thesis  West  Virginia 
University.   1959. 

Study  centered  in   Monongalia  County,  West  Virginia. 

433.  MAZZEI,  FRANK  JOSEPH 

A  study  of  the  factors  influence  job-satisfaction  among  factory  workers  of  Clarks- 
burg, West  Virginia,  and  coal  miners  of  Morgantown,  West  Virginia.  Thesis. 
West  Virginia   University.   1953. 

43 


433A.    RATLIFF,  PAUL 

Yesterday's  coal  town.  ML&W  Winter  1960  20-23. 

A  "photo-essay"  depicting  conditions  in  a  declining  mine  village. 

434.    WILFONG,  HARRY  DEAN 

A  cross-validation  study  of  a  mining  foreman   selection   key,   devised   from   the 
Minnesota  multiphasic  personality  inventory.  Thesis.  West  Virginia   University. 


44 


Relig 


ion 


BIBLIOGRAPHY 


435.  NOSS,  MARIE  G. 

Books  on  the  southern  mountain  area  that  contain  religion  or  sections  on 
religion,   1947-1955.  Berea:    Berea  College,   nd.  proc. 

GENERAL 

436.  BRUERE,  MARTHA  B.  &  ROBERT 

The  church  of  the  lean  land.  Outlook  109:987-95    1915. 

437.  BRUNK,  HARRY  A. 

History  of  Mennonites  in  Virginia.  Staunton:   McClure  Printing  Co.,  1959+ . 

Volume  One  covers  the  period   1727-1900. 

438.  CAMPBELL,  ROBERT  F. 

Mission  work  among  the  mountain  whites  in  Ashville  Presbytery,  North  Caro- 
lina. Ashville:  Citizens  Co.,  1899. 

439.  CASSELL,  CHARLES  W.  AND  OTHERS 

History  of  the  Lutheran  Church  in  Virginia  and  East  Tennessee,  Strasburg, 
Virginia:  Shenandoah  Publishing  House,  1930.  401p. 

Tables  and  index:  pp343-401. 

440.  CLARK,  ELMER  T. 

The  small  sects  in  America.  New  York  and  Nashville:  Abingdon-Cokesbury 
Press,  1949.  256p. 

441.  CRAIG,  EDWARD   M. 

Highways  and  byways  of  Appalachia.  Kingsport,  Tennessee:  Kingsport  Press, 
1927,  183p. 

"A  study  of  the  work  of  the  Synod  of  Appalachia  of  the  Presbyterian  Church 
in  the  United  States." 

442.  DAVIDSON,  PERRY 

Religious  response  in  our  corner  of  the  mountain.  ML&W.  Ja.  1926    5-11. 

443.  DORAN,  PAUL  E. 

Some  church  problems  in  the  Southern  Appalachians.  MLirW.  Ap.  1929    11-15. 

444.  DOUGLAS,  HARLAN  P. 

Christian  reconstruction  in  the  South.  Boston;   Pilgrim  Press,  1909.  407p. 
Much  of  the  work  deals  with  the  problem  of  the  Negro,  especially  in  the  deep 
south.    However,  pp303-66  are  devoted  to   the  Southern   Appalachians.   Chapter 
XI:   "The  passing  of  the  Mountaineer." 

444A.    FOREMAN,  KENNETH  J. 

Propose  unity  in  Appalachia.  Christian  Century.  73:929-30    1956. 

Report  of  a  conference  of  mountain  workers  at  Berea.  The  Conference  urged 
that  all  churches  cooperate  "to  provide  for  the  adequate  churching  of  all 
people  of  the  Appalachian  region." 

445.  FORTUNE,  ALONZO  W. 

The  Disciples  in  Kentucky.  Lexington:  Convention  of  the  Christian  Churches 
in  Kentucky,  1932.  415p. 

446.  GARNETT,  W.  E. 

The  Virginia  rural  church  and  related  influences,  1900-1950.  Virginia  Agri- 
cultural Experiment  Station.   Bulletin  479,    1957.  88p. 

Brings  up  to  date  and  expands  a  similar  study  made  in  1929. 

45 


447.  GRIFFITH,  HENRIETTA   MAE 

A  history  of  religious  education  in  the  Kentucky  mountains.  Thesis.  Asbury 
Theological  Seminary.   1950. 

448.  GUERRANT,  EDWARD   O. 

The  galex  gatherers;  the  gospel  among  the  highlanders.  Richmond:  Onward 
Press,  1910.  220p. 

449.  HALE,  WADE  H. 

The  scope  of  religious  education  in  the  secondary  schools  of  Greenville  County, 
South  Carolina.  Thesis.  Furman  University.  1958. 

450.  HAMILTON,  MICHAEL 

Ministry  to  the  southern  mountaineer.  A  report  of  the  research  work  done  by 
the  Church  of  the  Advent  in  the  neighborhood  of  Walnut  Hills,  Cincinnati, 
Ohio.  August  1955  to  August  1958.  Cincinnati,  1958.  28p.  proc. 

451.  HILBISH,  FLORENCE  M.  A. 

Tales  of  a  frontier  preacher.  New  York:  Pagent,  1959.  156p. 

Reminiscences  by  a  Methodist  minister  of  his  career  working  in  the  West 
Virginia  Conferences  during  the  first  third  of  the  20th  Century.  Edited  by  his 
daughter. 

452.  HOLT,  JOHN  B. 

Holiness  religion:  cultural  shock  and  social  reorganization.  American  Sociological 
Review.  5:740-47    1940. 

453.  HOOKER,  ELIZABETH  R. 

The  churches  of  the  highlanders.  ML&W.  Jl  1933  25-29. 

454.  HOOKER,  ELIZABETH  R. 

Religion  in  the  highlands;  native  churches  and  missionary  enterprises  in  the 
Southern  Appalachian  area.  New  York:    Home  Missions   Council,   1933.  319p. 

455.  HUGHSON,  WALTER,  compiler 

The   Church's   mission    to    the    mountaineers    of    the    South.    Hartford,    Conn.: 
Church  Missions  Publishing  Co.,  1908.   131  p. 
The  church  is  the  Protestant  Episcopal  Church. 

456.  KAUFMAN,  HAROLD  F. 

Religious  organization  in  Kentucky.  Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment  Station. 

Bulletin  524,  1948.  44p. 

Church  membership,  Sunday  school  enrollment  etc.,  by  county. 

457.  KAUFMAN,  HAROLD  F. 

Rural  churches  in   Kentucky,   1947.  Kentucky  Agricultural   Experiment   Station. 

Bulletin  530,  1949.  48p. 

Church  membership,  number  of  ministers  etc.,  by  county. 

458.  KELLY,  L.  C. 

The  mountain   preacher  and   the  mountain  problem.  ML&W.  Ap    1933     11-16. 

A  frank  discussion  of  "the  failure  of  the  religious  leader  to  measure  up  to  the 
moral  demands  of  the  situation." 

459.  LEDBETTER,  MARGARET 

The  village  church  in  North  Carolina.  Thesis.  Duke  University.  1931. 

460.  McAllister,  james  gray 

Edward  O.  Guerrant:  apostle  to  the  Southern  Hihglands.  Richmond:  Rich- 
mond Press,  Inc.,  1950.  238p. 

Biography  of  the  noted  evangelist  and  founder  of  the  "Society  of  Soul  Winners" 
(American  Inland  Mission). 

461.    McCONNELL,  LELA  G. 

Faith  victorious  in  the  Kentucky  mountains;   the  story  of   twenty-two  years  of 
spirit-filled  ministry.  Winona  Lake,  Indiana:   Light  &  Life  Press,  1946.  237p. 
Story  of  the  Kentucky  Mountain  Holiness  Association,  its  schools  and  activities. 

46 


462.  McCONNELL,  LELA 

The  Pauline  ministry  in  the  Kentucky  Mountains.  Berne,  Indiana:  Light  and 
Hope  Publications,  8th  Edition.   (1950?).  200p. 

"A  brief  account  of  the  Kentucky  Mountain  Holiness  Association.*' 

463.  MARTIN,  ISAAC  P. 

A  minister  in  the  Tennessee  Valley.  Nashville:   Parthenon  Press,   19:54.  234p. 

464.  MASTERS,  FRANK  M. 

History  of  Baptists  in  Kentucky.  Louisville:  Baptist  Historical  Society,  1953. 
639p.    (Publication  No.  5  of  the  Society). 

645.    MAURER,  BERYL  B. 

The  rural  church  and  organized  community  activity;  a  study  of  church- 
community  relations  in  two  East  Tennessee  communities.  Thesis.  University  of 
Tennessee.   1953. 

466.  MORSE,  HERMANN  N. 

Missionary  program  in  the  Highlands.  ML&W.  Jl  1933  30-35. 

467.  MOUNTAIN   MINISTERS 

The  last  source  for  advice?  MLirW.  Fall  1959  23-27. 

A    discussion    of    the    reason    why    mountain    people    turn    so    infrequently    to 

ministers  for  advice. 

468.  MYERS,  GRACE  F. 

Them  missionary  women;  or  work  in  the  southern  mountains.  Hillsdale, 
Michigan,  1911.   132p. 

469.  OLMSTEAD,  PAUL  D. 

Adventure  in  Tennessee:  "wreck-reaction"  becomes  recreation  through  church 
leadership.  Recreation  43:396-98    1949. 

Describes  the  activities  of  the  Alpine  Recreation  Association  in  improving 
leisure  activities  for  the  youth  of  the  Overton  County  area. 

470.  ORMOND,  JESSE   M. 

The  country  church  in  North  Carolina.  Durham:  Duke  University  Press,  1931. 
369p. 

Includes  a  county  by  county  survey. 

471.  PARKS,  JAMES  R. 

A  follow-up  study  of  attitudes  of  Sullivan  County  high  school  seniors  toward 
the  church.  Thesis.  ETSC,   1953. 

472.  PIEPER,  MARY  G. 

Church  organization  in  Bradley  County,  Tennessee  in  1950.  Thesis.  University 
of  Tennessee.  1952. 

473.  POPE,  LISTON 

Millhands  and  preachers.  New  Haven:  Yale  University  Press,  1942.  369p.  (Yale 
Studies  in  Religious  Education  XV.) 

Study  centered  in  Gaston  County,  North  Carolina.  Bibliography  pp337-57. 

474.  RYLAND,  GARNETT 

The  Baptists  of  Virginia,  1699-1926.  Richmond:  Virginia  Baptist  Board  of 
Missions  &  Education,  1955.  372p. 

475.  SMILEY,  DAVID  L. 

Educational  attitudes  of  North  Carolina  Baptists.  North  Carolina  Historical 
Review  35:316-27    1958. 

476.  TADLOCK.  E.  Y. 

Church  problems  in  the  mountains.  A//.dTP.  Ap  1930    6-8. 

47 


477.  WEATHERFORD,  WILLIS  D.    (Editor) 

Religion  in  the  Appalachian  Mountains;  a  symposium.  Berea  College,  1955.  132p. 
Contents:  the  religion  of  the  pioneers;  the  Presbyterians:  Baptists  in  the 
Southern  Highlands;  Methodists  work  in  the  mountains;  the  work  of  the 
Christian  Church;  small  sects  in  the  mountains;  brief  suggestions  for  improve- 
ment. 

478.  WHEELER,  LESTER  R. 

Religious  ideals  in  the  highlands.  ML&W.  Fall  1951  26-31. 

478A.    WHITAKER,  WALTER  C. 

A  round  robin;  the  southern  highlands  anil  highlanders.  Hartford:  Church 
Mission  Publishing  Co.,  1916.   147p. 

479.  WILLIAMS,  CLAUDE  C.  AND   OTHERS 

The  Pentecostal  churches.  ML&W.  Winter  1944  18-22. 

480.  WILSON,  WARREN   H. 

The  educated  minister  in  the  mountains.  ML&W.  Ap  1930   20-24. 


48 


Negroes,  Indians  and  Other 
Minority  Racial  and  Ethnic  Groups 

481.  BAILEY,  E.B. 

The  Negro  in  East  Tennessee.  Thesis.  New  York  University.   1947. 

482.  BALL,  BONNIE 

A  vanishing  race.  ML&W.  Sum  1960   39-42. 

A  description  of  the  Malungeons,  "a  strange  group  of  people  whose  origin 
was,  and  has  remained,  one  of  the  deepest  and  most  fascinating  mysteries  of 
American   Ethnology." 

483.  BEALE,  CALVIN   L. 

American  triracial  isolates.  Eugenics   Quarterly   4:187-96.    1957. 

A  study  of  groups  of  mixed  Indian,  white  and  Negro  ancestry,  many  of  which 
are  located  in  the  Southern  Appalachian  area.  Includes  a  listing  of  such  by 
state  and  county. 

484.  CANSLER,  CHARLES  W. 

Three  generations;  the  story  of  a  colored  family  of  eastern  Tennessee.  Kings- 
port:   Kingsport   Press,   1939.   173p. 

485.  COMETTI,  ELIZABETH 

Swiss  immigration  to  West  Virginia,  1864-1884.  Mississippi  Valley  Historical 
Review  47:66-87    1960. 

486.  COOPER,  H.  S. 

German  and  Swiss  colonization  of  Morgan  County.  Thesis.  University  of 
Tennessee.  1925. 

487.  DAVIS,  HESTER  A. 

Social  interaction  and  kinship  in  Big  Cove  Community,  Cherokee,  North  Caro- 
lina. Thesis.  University  of  North  Carolina.  1957. 
A  Cherokee  Indian  Community. 

487A.    DUNLAP,  A.  R.  AND  C.  A.  WESLAGER 

Trends  in  the  naming  of  tri-racial  mixed  blood  groups  in  the  eastern  United 
States.  American  Speech  22:81-87    1947. 

488.  GARDNER,  ANNIE  C. 

Social  organization   and   community   solidarity   in    Painttown,   Cherokee,    North 
Carolina.  Thesis.   University  of  North   Carolina.    1958. 
A   Cherokee   Indian   Community. 

489.  GILBERT,  WILLIAM  H. 

Mixed  bloods  of  the  Upper  Monongahela  Valley,  West  Virginia.  Journal  of 
the  Washington  Academy  of  Sciences.  XXXVI:  1-13    1946. 

A  description  of  the  "Guinea  Negroes"  of  north-central  West  Virginia. 

490.  GRANT,  JOHN  L. 

Behavioral  premises  in  the  culture  of  conservative  eastern  Cherokee  Indians. 
Thesis.  University  of  North  Carolina.   1957. 

490A.    GULICK,  JOHN 

Cherokees  at  the  crossroads.  Chapel  Hill:  University  of  North  Carolina.  Insti- 
tute for  Research  in  Social  Science.  1960.  202p. 

"This  monograph  is  an  attempt  to  draw  together  the  findings  of  a  study  of  the 
present-day  ways  of  life  of  the  Eastern  Band  of  Cherokee  Indians." 

491.  JACKSON,  HELEN   FRANCIS 

The  German  Swiss  settlers  at  Gruetli,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  Vanderbilt.  1933. 

49 


492.  KOLLMORGEN,  WALTER  M. 

The  German  Settlement  in  Cullman  County,  Alabama;  an  agricultural  island 
in  the  cotton  belt.  Washington:    USDA,   1941.  60p.  proc. 

493.  KOLLMORGAN,  WALTER  M. 

The  German  Swiss  in  Franklin  County,  Tennessee;  a  study  of  the  significance 
of  cultural  considerations  in  farming  enterprises.  Washington:  USDA,  1940.  113p. 
proc. 

494.  KOLLMORGAN,  WALTER   M. 

A  reconnaissance  of  some  cultural-agricultural  islands  in  the  South.  Economic 
Geography   17:409-30    1941. 

495.  NESKAUG,  SELMER  R. 

Agricultural  and  social  aspects  of  the  Swiss  settlement  in  Grundy  County, 
Tennessee.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.  193G. 

496.  NESKAUG,  SELMER   R.  AND    OTHERS 

How  the  Swiss  farmers  operate  on  the  Cumberland  Plateau.  Tennessee  Agri- 
cultural Experiment  Station.  Monograph  33,  1937. 

497.  PATTON,  CATHERINE 

West  Virginia's  so-called  "Guineas."   West    Virginia  Review   6:270    1929. 

Description  of  a  "unique  tribe  of  people"  in   Barbour  County. 

498.  TOWER,  J.  ALLEN  AND  WALTER  WOLFE 

Ethnic  groups  in   Cullman   County,   Alabama.   Geographical   Review    33:276-85. 

1943. 

"At   present    there   are   nearly   2,500   German-Americans    in    the    county." 

499.  WILLIAM,  ELLIS  RAY 

Contacts  of  Negroes  and  whites  in  Morgantown,  Thesis.  West  Virginia  Uni- 
versity.  1952. 

500.  WORDEN,  WILLIAM  L. 

Sons  of  the  legend.  Saturday  Evening  Post  O   18,   1947  28-29. 

"Surrounded  by  mystery  and  fantastic  legends,  the  Malungeons  live  on  New- 
man's Ridge,  deep  in  the  Tennessee  mountains.  The  story  of  a  colony  whose 
background  is  lost  in  antiquity." 


50 


Education 


ATTENDANCE,  DROPOUTS 


500A.    COBB,  IRENE  S. 

Varience  in  the  theory  and  practice  of  attendance  workers  in  selected  East  Ten- 
nessee systems.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.  1959. 

501.  COOPER,  JOHN   R. 

A  study  of  pupil  withdrawal  in  ten  secondary  schools  of  Floyd,  Knott,  Letcher, 
and  Pike  counties  through  the  school  year  of  1932-33.  Thesis.  University  of 
Kentucky.  1934. 

502.  GIBSON,  VIVIAN  L. 

A  study  of  voluntary  withdrawals  from  McHenry  and  five  feeder  schools  in 
Floyd  County,  Georgia.  Thesis.   University  of  Alabama.   1952. 

503.  GOFF,  KENNETH  JAMES 

An  investigation  of  the  factors  causing  absenteeism  at  Blounlvillc  High  School. 
Thesis.  ETSC.  1957. 

504.  GOLDEN,  CHARLES  E. 

A  survey  of  the  causes  of  absences  in  the  public  school  system  of  White  County 
and  Sparta,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  George  Peabody  College   for  Teachers.   1954. 

505.  HARGROVE,  JACK  B. 

A  comparative  study  of  school  dropouts  from  1945-50  in  Holt  Junior  High 
School  and  Taylorville  Junior  High  School,  Tuscaloosa  County,  Alabama. 
Thesis.  Alabama  State  College.  1952. 

506.  HAROLD,  KATHLEEN  ETTA 

A  study  of  a  group  of  drop-outs  of  the  Greeneville  High  School.  Thesis  ETSC. 
1952. 

507.  HARRILL,  BOB  E. 

A  study  of  the  practices  and  techniques  used  by  principals  and  teachers  in  the 
McMinn  County  schools  to  improve  school  attendance.  Thesis.  University  of 
Tennessee.  1958. 

507A.    INGRAM,  HENRY  R. 

Study  of  factors  causing  potential  drop-outs  to  remain  in  the  Mitchell  County, 
North  Carolina  high  schools.  Thesis.  ETSC.   1959. 

508.  JOHNSON,  ROY   L. 

A  study  of  reorganization  of  attendance  centers  in  Hawkins  County,  Tennessee. 
Thesis.    University  of   Tennessee.    1955. 

509.  JOHNSON,  VICTOR  M. 

A  study  of  the  drop-outs  from  the  Bristol,  Tennessee  school  system  in  grades 
8-12  from  1946  to  1951.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.  1952. 

510.  LANE,  BILLY  J. 

Some  factors  affecting  school  attendance  as  a  family  problem,  as  revealed  by  a 
comparison  of  two  groups  of  families  in  Washington  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis. 
ETSC.  1952. 

511.  LIVINGSTON,  INEZ 

School  attendance  in  Harlan  County,  Kentucky,  1948-1954.  Thesis.  Ohio  State 
University.  1956. 

512.  MAUNEY,  MARGARET 

They  come  to  school  in  Cherokee.  North  Carolina  Education.  My  1950  14. 
Discussion  of  attendance  problems  in  a  North  Carolina  mountain  county. 

51 


513.  MORGAN,  W.  L. 

Improving  school  attendance  in  six  white  elementary  schools  in  Polk  County, 
Georgia.  Thesis.  University  of  Georgia.  1949. 

514.  MOSBY,  ROBERT  H. 

Chief  causes  of  non-attendance  in  the  schools  of  McDowell  County,  West  Vir- 
ginia. Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky.   1940. 

514A.    NICELY,  BILLY  K. 

A  study  of  the  reorganization  of  the  attendance  centers  of  the  Grainger  County 
school  system.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.  1959. 

515.  SHAFER,  HOLLY  M. 

Why  pupils  drop  out  of  school  before  finishing  the  grades  in  the  rural  schools 
of  West  Virginia.  Thesis.  West  Virginia   University.   1929. 

516.  STEWART,  ACIE 

A  study  of  students  dropping  out  of  Wyoming  County  (West  Virginia)  high 
schools  for  the  1950-51  school  term.  Thesis.  Marshall  College.  1952. 

EDUCATIONAL  SURVEYS  OF  COUNTIES,   CITIES  AND  AREAS 

517.  ALABAMA  EDUCATIONAL  SURVEY  COMMISSION 

Public  education  in  Alabama.  Washington:  American  Council  on  Education, 
1945.  452p. 

518.  BENTON,  ROBERT  L. 

A  study  of  McMinn  County  (Tennessee)  High  School  as  determined  by  its 
graduates.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.  1952. 

519.  BEREA  COLLEGE.  DEPARTMENT  OF  EDUCATION 

Evidences  of  inequality  of  educational  opportunity  in  Kentucky  mountain  coun- 
ties. Berea:  Berea  College,  1953. 

520.  BEREA  COLLEGE.  DEPARTMENT  OF  EDUCATION 

Rural  school  improvement  project  leport,  1953-57.  Berea:  Berea  College,  1958. 
174p.  proc. 

521.  BOWMAN,  OWEN 

A  study  of  the  small  school  in  the  mountains  of  Virginia.  Thesis.  VPI.  1953. 

Includes  much  socio-economic  information  on  Carroll  County,  Virginia.  The 
school  under  consideration  is  the  Lambsburg  School,  a  combination  grade  and 
high  school  in  an  isolated  area  of  that  county. 

522.  CARSON-NEWMAN    COLLEGE.     (Jefferson    City) 

An  educational  study  of  Jefferson  County,  Tennessee.  Carson-Newman  College 
Book  Store,  1936.  114p.  proc. 

523.  DAVIS,  HAZE  A. 

A  study  of  the  four  high  schools  in  Claiborne  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  Uni- 
versity of  Tennessee.   1957. 

524.  DAWSON,  GEORGE  W. 

Problem  survey  of  the  elementary  and  high  school  at  Crum  (West  Virginia). 
Thesis.  Marshall  College.   1952. 

525.  DYKES,  ARCHIE  REECE 

What  the  patrons  of  Hawkins  County  Schools  think  about  their  schools.  Thesis. 
ETSC.  1956. 

526.  ENSLOW,  ELLA.   [Lena  Murray] 

Schoolhouse  in  the  foothills.  New  York:  Simon  &  Schuster,  1935.  239p. 

A  narrative  of  a  teacher  assigned  to  a  one-room  school  in  the  Southern  Appa- 
lachian coal  region.    Period  is  the  Depression  era  of  the  early   1930s. 


527.  FROST,  NORMAN 

A  statistical  study  of  the  public  schools  of   the  Southern  Appalachian    Moun- 
tains. Washington:  GPO,  1915.  7Ip.    (U.S.  Bureau  of  Education  Bulletin  636). 

528.  GAUMNITZ,  WALTER  H. 

Education    in    the    Southern    Mountains.    Washington:    GPO,    1937.    51p.     (U.S. 
Office  of  Education  Bulletin.  1937,  No.  26). 

529.  GIBBS,  JAMES  E. 

Public  education  in   Tennessee;   grades   1    through    12.   Nashville,   1957.  487p. 
A  report  to  the  Education   Survey  Subcommittee  of   the  Tennessee   Legislative 
Council.    A  exhaustive  study  of  public  education  in  Tennessee. 

530.  GLENN,  ALFONSO. 

Survey  of  public  education   in  Watauga   County,  North   Carolina   Thesis.   Uni- 
versity of  North  Carolina.  1932. 

531.  GOOCH,  WILBUR  I.  AND  FRANKLIN  J.  KELLER 

Breathitt  County  in  the  Southern  Appalachians.  Occupations  14:1012-1110    1936. 

A  detailed  study  of  the  problems  of  education  and  vocational  guidance   in   a 
mountain  area. 

532.  GREGORY,  MADELINE  T. 

A    survey   of   special   education   services    in    Washington,    Carter    and    Sullivan 
Counties,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  ETSC.  1955. 

533.  HOLLAND,   CARL  W. 

Educational  facilities  and  economic  development  of   Bristol,    1930-1950.   Thesis. 
ETSC.  1956. 

534.  LENTZ,  FRED  W. 

A  survey  of  the  educational  facilities  of  the  public  schools  of  Alexander  County, 
North  Carolina.  Thesis.  University  of  North  Carolina.  1951. 

535.  PUBLIC   EDUCATION   IN    HARLAN    COUNTY,   KENTUCKY 

Bulletin  of  the  Bureau  of  School  Services.  College  of  Education,   University  of 
Kentucky.  20:2    (D  1947)  201p. 

A    thorough   study   of   the   educational    problems   of    Harlan    County.    Includes 
much  of  interest  to  the  economist  and  sociologist. 

536.  RAY,  A.  HERMAN 

An   economic,   educational    and   social    study    of    Franklin    County,    Tennessee. 
Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.  1937. 

537.  ROSS,  ERNEST  LAFAYETTE 

An  educational  study  of  Bradley  County,  Tennessee  Thesis.  University  of  Ten- 
nessee. 1940. 

538.  SHELTON,  TOM  AND  FRED  NEIL 

Trends   and   needs   of   the   Washington    County,    Tennessee   schools,    1948-1966. 
Thesis.  ETSC.  1954. 

539.  SOUTHERN  EDUCATIONAL  BOARD 

Educational    conditions    in    the    Southern    Appalachians.    Knoxville:    Southern 
Educational  Board,  1902.  32p.   (Bulletin  of  the  SEB  1:1). 

540.  THOMAS,  WALTER  B. 

A  survey  of  educational  facilities  in  Cherokee  County,  North  Carolina.  Thesis. 
University  of  North  Carolina.   1948. 

541.  THOMASSON,  LILLIAN   F. 

Education  in  Swain  County,  North  Carolina.  Thesis.  University  of  North  Caro- 
lina. 1939. 

542.  WALKER,  ZEDDIE 

An  educational  study  of  Grundy  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  University  of  Ten- 
nessee. 1952. 

53 


543.  WEST  VIRGINIA.  LEGISLATIVE  INTERIM   COMMITTEE 

A  survey  of  the  educational  programs  of  the  West  Virginia  public  schools. 
Charleston,  1957.  449p. 

A  comprehensive  and  detailed  study  of  the  public  school  system  of  West  Vir- 
ginia. 

544.  WILSON,  ROSS   HARLAN 

A  study  of  secondary  schools  of  Morgan  County.  Thesis.  Universitv  of  Tennessee. 
1941. 

FINANCE  AND  ADMINISTRATION 

545.  ACUFF,  J.  T. 

The  effort  and  ability  of  Grainger  County  to  support  its  schools.  Thesis.  Uni- 
versity of  Tennessee.  1955. 

546.  CRAGHEAD,  PAUL 

Cost  of  operating  the  schools  in  Raleigh  County  (West  Virginia)  from  1940- 
50.  Thesis.  Marshall  College.  1952. 

547.  DYKES,  ARCHIE  R. 

A  study  of  public  school  finance  in  the  Southern  Appalachian  region.  Ed.D. 
University  of  Tennessee.  1959. 

"The  major  trend  in  school  revenue  during  the  period  under  study  was  the 
decreasing  importance  of  local  contributions." 

548.  FRYE,  PAUL  DEWEY 

A  suggested  plan  of  consolidation  of  the  schools  of  Greene  County,  Tennessee. 
Thesis.   ETSC.   1958. 

549.  GARLAND,   MATILDA   PIERCE 

Effect  of  consolidation  of  Johnson   County  schools.   Thesis.   ETSC.   1956. 

550.  HUMAN,  WILLIAM  D. 

A  study  preparatory  to  cooperative  development  of  board  of  education  policies 
for  Morgan  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.   1954. 

551.  LIVFSAY,  GLENN,  Q. 

A  study  of  public  school  finance  in  Hancock  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  Uni- 
versity of  Tennessee.  1954. 

552.  MILLS,  ROBERT  L. 

A  method   of  measuring   the   financial   ability   of   Kentucky   school    districts    to 
support   an   educational    program.   Bulletin    of   the    Bureau   of   School   Services, 
College  of  Education,  University  of  Kentucky.  24:1    (1951),  97p. 
Much  useful  statistical  data.  Arranged  by  county. 

552A.    MITCHELL,  CARRIE 

An  analysis  of  the  possibilities  for  local  support  of  education  in  Pickett  County, 
Tennessee.  Thesis.  Tennessee  Polytechnic.   1959. 

553.  MORGAN,  JESSE  W. 

Excess  levies  and  school  bond  issues  in  Wyoming  County  (West  Virginia)  from 
1933-1951.  Thesis.   Marshall  College.    1952. 

554.  MULLIKAN,  TRUMAN  S. 

An  analysis  of  school  district  organization  in  Greenville  County,  South  Caro- 
lina. Thesis.  Furman  University.  1952. 

554A.    NICHOLS,  EARL 

An  analysis  of  Putnam  County's  ability  to  support  education  based  on  a  study 
and  comparison  of  assessed  value  to  real  value  of  property.  Thesis.  Tennessee 
Polytechnic.   1959. 

555.  SMELCER,  BUNA 

A  study  of  financing  a  program  of  education  in  Sevier  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis. 
University  of  Tennessee.  1956. 

54 


556.  STRADLEY,  WILLIAM   B. 

Local  ability  to  support  education   ...   in  Monroe  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis. 
University  of  Tennessee.   1955. 

557.  VINSON,  LACY  W. 

A  study  of  the  ability  of  Coke  County  to  support   its  schools.  Thesis.   Univer- 
versity  of  Tennessee.  1957. 

558.  WILLIAMS,  PEARL  D. 

The   development   of   a   statement   of   written    policies    for    the   Roane   County, 
Tennessee  board  of  education.  Thesis.   University  of  Tennessee.   1958. 

HISTORY 

559.  ALLEN,  ROSCOE  J. 

A   history   and    development   of  education    in    Wilkes    County,    North    Carolina. 
Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.  1952. 

5G0.    ANDERSON,  PAUL  FAIN 

The  history  of  educational  development  in  Sullivan  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis. 
University   of  Tennessee.    1936. 

561.  ARCHER,  CORDELIA 

History  of  the  schools  of  Johnson  City,  Tennessee.  1868-1950.  Thesis.  ETSC.  1953. 

562.  BAILEY,  EDGAR  W. 

History    of    education    of    Magoffin    County,    Kentucky.    Thesis.    University    of 
Kentucky.  1932. 

563.  BENNETT,  CLEMMON   A. 

History  of  education  in   Gordon   County,   Georgia.   Thesis.    University   of   Ken- 
tucky.  1932. 

564.  BLAIR,  REUBEN  MOORE 

Development   of   education    in    Polk    County,   Tennessee.    Thesis.    University   of 
Tennessee.   1941. 

565.  G\RDER,  ROSCOE  H. 

History  of  education  in  Jackson  County,  Kentucky.  Thesis.   University  of  Ken- 
tucky. 1937. 

566.  COBB,  DONALD 

The  educational  development  of  Tyler  County,  West  Virginia.  Thesis.  Marshall 
College.  1952. 

567.  CRICK,   HERBERT   W. 

Historv  of  education  in  Pike  County,  Kentucky.  Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky. 
1930. 

568.  COOKE.  KENNIS 

A   history  of  education  in   Wyoming  County    (West  Virginia).  Thesis.   Marshall 
College.  1952. 

569.  COPE,  ANNIS  D. 

A  history  of  education  in  Hawkins  County  with  special  reference  to  Rock  Hill 
School.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.  1957. 

570.  ELKINS.  JOHN  E. 

History    of   education    of    Lawrence    County,    Kentucky.    Thesis.    University    of 
Kentucky.  1935. 

571.  ELROD,  HENRY  J. 

Educational  development  of  Oconee   County,  S.C.   Thesis.    University  of   South 
Carolina.  1934. 

572.  FRAZIER,  CHALMER 

History  of  education  of  Floyd  County,  Kentucky.  Thesis.  LTniversity  of  Kentucky. 
1939. 

55 


573.  FRIEDL,  JOSEPH.  J. 

History  of  education   in   McDowell   County,  West   Virginia.   Thesis.    University 
of  Kentucky.  1940. 

574.  GABBARD,  EUGENE 

History  of  education  in   Owsley  County,   Kentucky,  Thesis.   University  of  Ken- 
tucky. 1939. 

575.  HINEBAUGH,   MARGARET   H. 

History  of  education  of  Marion  County,  West  Virginia.  Thesis.  West  Virginia 
University.   1940. 

576.  HUNTER,  CATHERINE  H. 

A  history  of  higher  education  in  Franklin  County,  Tennessee.   Thesis.  Univer- 
versity  of  Tennessee.  1940. 

577.  HURT,  A.  B. 

Educational   development   of  Ashe   County.   Thesis.    University   of   North   Caro- 
lina. 1929. 

578.  JACKSON,  WARD   B. 

The    history   of   education   of   Boyd    County,    Kentucky.    Thesis.    University    of 
Kentucky,  1932. 

579.  KNIGHT,  MAZIE  M. 

A  history  of  the  secondary  schools   of  Cocke   County,  Tennessee.   Thesis.   Uni- 
sity  of  Tennessee.  1952. 

580.  LADD,   ROBERT  A. 

The  development  of  education  in  Roane  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  University 
of  Tennessee,   1958. 

581.  McCOY,  LOTTIE 

History  of  education  in  Harlan  County,   Kentucky.   Thesis.   University  of  Ken- 
tucky.  1936. 

582.  McDADE,  FRANK  E. 

History   of  education   in   Logan   County,   West   Virginia.    Thesis.    University    of 
Kentucky.   1941. 

583.  MALONE,  HOWARD  D. 

A  history  of  education   in  Jefferson   County,   Tennessee.   Thesis.    University   of 
Tennessee.  1955. 

584.  NORTON,  EGBERT 

History   of   education    in    Rockcastle    County,    Kentucky.    Thesis.    University   of 
Kentucky.  1932. 

585.  POWERS.  OZELLE  SINA 

A   history  of  education   in   McMinn   County,   Tennessee.   Thesis.   University   of 
Tennessee.   1950. 

585A.    PRATT,   C.   W. 

The  history  and  development  of  education  in  Knox  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis. 
University  of  Tennessee.  1959. 

586.  QUALLS,  DANIEL 

History  of  education  in  Carter   County,  Kentucky.   Thesis.   University   of   Ken- 
tucky.  1931. 

587.  RICE,  LAWRENCE  K. 

History  of  education  in  Breathitt  County,  Kentucky.  Thesis.  University  of  Ken- 
tucky. 1933. 

588.  RIDENOUR,  GEORGE  LAWRENCE 

The  development  of  public  education  in  Campbell  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis. 
University  of  Tennessee.   1950. 

56 


589.  ROLSTON,  FRANCES 

History  of  education  in  Letcher  County,  Kentucky.  Thesis.  University  of  Ken- 
tucky. 1939. 

590.  SEXTON,  OSWELL  S. 

A  history  of  education  in  Scott  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  University  of  Ten- 
nessee. 1951. 

591.  TAYLOR,  JOHN  M. 

History  of  education  in  Laurel  County,  Kentucky.  Thesis.  University  of  Ken- 
tucky. 1932. 

592.  VEAL,  CORA  T. 

The  development  of  education  in  Monroe  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  Uni- 
versity of  Tennessee.  1958. 

593.  WEAVER,  HAZEL  F. 

The  history  of  public  education  in  Fauquier  County,  Virginia,  1871-1954. 
Thesis.  American  University.   1954. 

594.  WILLIAMS,  FRANK  B.,  JR. 

The  East  Tennessee  Education  Association,  1903-1954.  East  Tennessee  Historical 
Society  Publications  27:49-79.   1955. 

595.  WOODSIDE,  ROBERT  E. 

The  educational  development  of  Avery  County  (North  Carolina).  Thesis.  Appa- 
lachian State  Teachers  College.  1952. 

596.  YOUNG,  HARRY  F. 

History  of  education  in  Wayne  County,  Kentucky.  Thesis.  University  of  Ken- 
tucky. 1927. 

NEGRO 

597.  CARTER,  R.  G. 

A  study  of  the  progress  of  Negro  education  in  Saint  Clair  County,  Alabama. 
Thesis.  Alabama  State  College.  1953. 

598.  CARUTHERS,  EUGENE 

An  investigation  of  the  exceptional  child  in  the  Negro  secondary  schools  of 
East  Tennessee.  Thesis.  ETSC.  1957. 

599.  DIXON,  HERTHA 

A  survey  of  the  library  facilities  in  the  Negro  schools  of  Tuscaloosa  County, 
Alabama.  Thesis.  Alabama  State  College.  1952. 

600.  FOSTER,  CLEMENTINE  R. 

A  critical  study  of  education  for  Negroes  in  Cleveland  County,  North  Carolina 
from  1944  to  1954.  Thesis.  North  Carolina  College.  1957. 

601.  FULLER,  R.  V. 

A  study  of  the  physical  education  problems  as  found  in  Negro  schools  in 
East  Tennessee.  Thesis.  Tennessee  Agricultural  and  Industrial  University.  1956. 

602.  GIVHAN,  MERCER  A. 

Factors  contributing  to  the  educational  development  of  the  Negro  schools  in 
the  Jefferson  County  (Alabama)  school  system,  1945-51.  Thesis.  Alabama  State 
College.  1952. 

603.  GLASS,  DANIEL 

A  study  of  the  causes  of  drop-outs  and  irregular  attendance  among  boys  in 
the  four  Negro  high  schools  of  Talladega  County,  Alabama.  Thesis.  Tuskegee 
Institute.   1953. 

604.  HOLLEY,  MARIE  E. 

A  study  of  absenteeism  in  the  Tazewell  County  one  room  Negro  elementary 
schools.  Thesis.  Ohio  State  University.  1954. 

57 


605.  INGRAM,  MILTON  J. 

A  history  of  Negro  education  in  Wilkes  County,  North  Carolina.  Thesis.  North 
Carolina  Agricultural  &  Technical  College.  1954. 

606.  JACKSON,  MINNIE  L. 

A  historical  development  of  schools  for  Negroes  in  Walker  County,  Georgia. 
Thesis.  Tennessee  A  &  I  State  University.  1958. 

607.  JONES,  ABRAHAM 

The  status  of  the  Negro  teachers  in  Blount,  Cullman,  Dekalh  and  Marshall 
Counties,  Alabama,  1952-53.  Thesis.  Alabama  Stale  College.  1954. 

608.  LONDON,  MARTHA  A. 

An  analysis  of  the  types  of  retardation  in  the  elementary  department  of  the 
five  Negro  union  schools  in  rural  Cleveland  County.  Thesis.  North  Carolina 
Agricultural  &  Technical  College.  1952. 

609.  MARTIN,  ARLEE 

History  of  the  development  of  Negro  public  schools  in  Bradley  County, 
Tennessee.  1931-1951.  Thesis.  Tennessee  Agricultural  &  Industrial  University. 
1952. 

610.  MAYNOR,  THEODORE  R. 

A  historical  analysis  of  student  drop-outs  in  the  Negro  schools  for  Bibb  County, 
Alabama.  Thesis.  Alabama  State  College.   1954. 

611.  MINNIS,  MARTHA  A. 

A  study  designed  for  the  attitudes  of  the  Negro  teachers  of  Bedford  County, 
Virginia  toward  in-service  teacher  education.  Thesis.  North  Carolina  Agricul- 
tural and  Technical  College.  1954. 

612.  MITCHELL,  CLEOPHUS  H. 

A  study  of  the  changes  in  the  educational  levels  of  the  Negro  teachers  in  Jef- 
ferson County,  Alabama,   1930-50.  Thesis.  Fisk   University.   1952. 

613.  RAKESTRAW,  ISAAC  K. 

Negro  education  in  Cocke  County.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.   1956. 

613A.    SMITH,  ELIZABETH  V. 

An  accounting  study  of  the  educational  progress  of  Knoxville  Negro  pupils  over 
a  sixteen-year  period.  Thesis.   University  of  Tennessee.   1959. 

614.  STARR,  DONALD  H. 

The  educational  progress  of  the  Negro  schools  in  Cherokee  County,  Alabama 
from  1930-1950.  Thesis.  Alabama  State  College.  1952. 

615.  TRUESDELL,  FRED  L. 

The  development  of  Negro  education  in  Rutherford  County,  North  Carolina. 
Thesis.  North  Carolina  Agricultural  &  Technical  College.   1954. 

PRIVATE,  CHURCH  AND  FOLK  SCHOOLS 

So  far  the  volume  of  published  material  is  concerned,  the  late  1920's  and  the 
early  1930's  represent  the  heyday  of  the  privately-supported  mountain  school. 
During  that  period  even  the  mass-circulation  magazines  carried  numerous 
articles  on  the  schools  and  their  accomplishments.  Such  small-circulation  but 
influential  journals  as  the  Nation  and  New  Republic  devoted  much  attention 
to  the  educational  and  social  problems  of  the  Southern  Appalachians.  Indeed, 
the  mountain  children,  like  the  Harlan  County  coal  miners,  became  during  the 
early  1930's  one  of  the  favorite  causes  of  social  reformers.  However,  there  lias 
been  a  marked  decline  in  the  interest  in— or  at  least  the  writing  about— the 
mountain  schools  since  the  Second  World  War.  The  two  outstanding  ex- 
ceptions have  been  Berea  College  and  the  Highlander  Folk  School.  The  con- 
tinued interest  in  Berea  is  doubtless  a  reflection  of  that  school's  vitality  ami 
genuine  importance.  The  interest  in  Highlander,  on  the  other  hand,  has  been 
due  almost  entirely  to  the  school's  alleged  communist  affiliations.  Most  of  the 
literature  on  the  matter  is  highly  polemical   in   nature. 

58 


GENERAL 

616.  BIDSTRUP,  GEORGE 

The  folk  school  faces  the  future.  ML&W.  Winter  1955    35-42. 

'".  .  .  there  is  more  need  for  folk  schools  than  ever  before." 

617.  CAMPBELL,  JOHN  C. 

Future  of  the  church  and  independent  schools  in  our  Southern  Highlands.  New 
York:  Russell  Sage  Foundation,  1917.  19p. 

618.  CAMPBELL,  OLIVE 

Southern    mountain    schools    maintained    by    denominational    and    independent 
agencies.  New  York:  Russell  Sage  Foundation,  1929.  16p. 

A   list  of  "those   schools   which  exist   primarily   for    the   southern   mountaineer 
and  which  are  carried  on  under  other  than  private  auspices." 

619.  DUNN,  FANNIE  W. 

The  work  of  private  schools  in  the  South.  MLirW.  Jl  1933    13-20. 

620.  FINNEY,  RAYMOND   ALFRED 

History    of    private    educational    institutions    of    Franklin    County,    Tennessee. 
Thesis.   University   of   Tennessee.    1939. 

621.  JASPER,  MARY  K. 

Social   value  of   settlement   schools   in    the    Kentucky    mountains.    Thesis.    Uni- 
versity of  Kentucky.   1930. 

622.  STUART,  JESSE 

A  freshman  at  Fishbone.  American  Mercury  28:153-57    1933. 

A  highly  critical  account  of  education  in  a   mountain   college.   A   reply   to   the 

above  in  the  same  journal,  My  1933    117. 

623.  STUART,  JESSE 

Leave  the  mountaineers  alone.  A^a'  Republic  78:366    1934 

624.  WALLER,  EUGENE  C. 

A  survey  of  the  church  and  independent  schools  and  colleges  of  the  Southern 
Appalachians.   Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.   1931. 

625.  WALTERS,  ROY  N. 

A  study  of  private  secondary  schools  in  southeastern  Kentucky.  Nashville,  Ten- 
nessee: George  Peabody  College  for  Teachers,  1957.  54p.  proc. 

626.  WITHOFT,  MABEL  S. 

Oak  and  laurel,  a  study  of  the  mountain  mission  schools  of  Southern  Baptists. 
Nashville:  Southern  Baptist  Convention,  1923.  155p. 
Gives  a  short  description  of  each  of  the  mission  schools. 

627.  WOOD,  HARRIETTE 

The   need    for   guidance    programs    in    privately    supported    mountain    schools. 
Richmond:  Southern  Woman's  Educational  Alliance,   1933.  127p.  proc. 

BEREA 

628.  FROST,  WILLIAM  G. 

For  the  mountains;  an  autobiography,  New  York:  F.  H.  Revell  Co.,  1937.  352p. 

The  greater  part  of  the  book  is  devoted  to  Frost's  work  as  President  of  Berea 
College.  Written  in  the  third  person. 

629.  MORGAN,  CHARLES  T. 

The  fruit  of  this  tree.  Kingsport,  Tennessee:   Kingsport  Press,   1946.  269p. 

An  informal  account  of  the  history  and  educational  philosophy  of  Berea  College. 
The  author  was  Alumni  Secretary  of  the  College  at  the  date  of  publication. 

630.  PECK,  ELIZABETH 

Berea's  first  century,   1855-1955.  Lexington:   University  of  Kentucky  Press,   1955. 
217p. 

59 


631.  PRINGLE,   HENRY  FOWLES 

School  where  nobody  loafs.  Saturday  Evening  Post  May  2,  1953    22-23. 

632.  WOOLF,  LEONARD 

Berea,  a  unique  example.  School  and  Society  73:241-44    1951. 

See  Edwards  items  444-79  for  reference  to  Berea  published  prior  to  1936. 

BERRY  SCHOOLS 

633.  BASSO,  HAMILTON 

About  the  Berry  Schools;  an  open  letter  to  Miss  Martha  Berry.  New  Republic 
78:206-08    1934. 

634.  CHILDERS,  JAMES  S. 

Sunday  lady  of  Possum  Trot.  Readers  Digest  Jl   1954    55-58. 

635.  KANE,  HARNETT  T. 

Miracle  in  the  mountains.  New  York:  Doubleday,  1956    320p. 

"The  inspiring  story  of  Martha  Berry's  crusade  for  the  mountain  people  of  the 
South." 

636.  One  woman's  vision.  American  Forests  F   1954    12-13. 
Photographs  of  student  activities  at  the  Berry  School. 

See  Edwards  items  480-507  for  references  to  the  Berry  Schools  published  prior 
to  1936. 

HIGHLANDER  FOLK  SCHOOL 

637.  ALEXANDER,   E.   H. 

Highlander  school  unmasked.  American  Mercury  Jl  1959    149-50. 

638.  CLARK,  SEPTIMA  AND  MYLES  HORTON 

Statement  of  policy  of  the  Highlander  Folk   School.  Journal  of  Humaji   Rela- 
tions. Summer  1958    78-88. 

639.  THE   HIGHLANDER   CONTROVERSY 
ML&W.  Winter  1959    23-25. 

A  brief  account  of  the  preliminary  hearing  held  in  September  1959  on  a  peti- 
tion to  close  the  school. 

640.  HIGHLAND   FOLK  SCHOOL 

The  story  of  an  educational  center  for  working  people,  np,  nd.    (12p). 

641.  LEWIS,  CLAUDIA 

It  takes  courage  and  ingenuity.  Progressive  Educatio?r   17:387-92    1940. 

641A.    PARRIS,  WENDALL  A. 

Highlander   Folk   School;    an    adult    education    school    with    a   purpose.    Negro 
History  Bulletin.  27:170    1958. 

642.  THOMAS,  WINBURN  T. 

Folk  school  in  jeopardy.  Christian  Century.  76: 1013-14    1959. 

643.  WAKEFIELD,  DAN 

Seige  at  Highlander.  Nation  189:323-25  1959. 

Description  of  the  attempt  to  force  the  closing  of  the  Highlander  Folk  School. 

JOHN    C.    GAMPBELL    FOLK   SCHOOL 

644.  BROWNLEE,  FREDERICK 

The  John  C,  Campbell  Folk  School,   1925-1952.  Brasstown,  1952.  23p. 

645.  CAMPBELL,  OLIVE 

Adjustment  to  rural  industrial  change  with  special  reference  to  mountain  areas. 
National  Educational  Association  Proceedings  67:484-88  1929. 

Discusses  the  work  of  the  John  C.  Campbell  Folk  School. 

60 


646.    CAMPBELL,  OLIVE 

I  sing  behind  the  plow.  Journal  of  Adult  Education   2:248-59    1930. 

An  analysis  of  educational   activities  in   the   Southern   Appalachians   in   general 
and  of  the  John  C.  Campbell  Folk  School  in  particular. 

648.  COOLIDGE,  RUTH 

Vibrations  from  a  Danish  bell;  the  John  C.  Campbell  Folk  School  at  Brasstown, 

N.  C.  American  Scandinavian  Review  33:107-17    1945. 

OTHER  SCHOOLS 

649.  BOND,  SIRLIS  O. 

The   light   of    the   hills;   a    history   of   Salem    College,    Charleston:    Educational 

Foundation,  1960.  434p. 

Salem  is  a  Seventh  Day  Baptist  College  in   Harrison  County,  West  Virginia. 

650.  BRAILLER,  FLOYD 

How  we  do  it  at  Madison.  ML&W.  Jl  1931    26-28. 
Description   of   the  Nashville  Agricultural   Normal   Institute. 

651.  CESSANA,  RALPH  W. 

College  for  Lincoln's  kind.  Christian  Science  Monitor   Weekly  Magazine.  D  28. 

1940  p7  +  . 

Lincoln   Memorial   University,   Harrogate,   Tennessee. 

652.  CLARK,  EUNICE  H. 

A  history  of  Traphill  Institute,  Wilkes  County,  North  Carolina.  Thesis.  Appa- 
lachian State  Teachers  College.  1954. 

653.  CLARK,  H.  T. 

A  history  of  Mountain  View  School,  Wilkes  County,  North  Carolina.  Thesis. 
Appalachian  State  Teachers  College.  1953. 

654.  DORRIS,  JONATHAN  T. 

Five  decades  of  progress;  Eastern  Kentucky  State  College,  1906-1957.  Richmond, 
Kentucky:  The  College,  358p. 

655.  DUTTON,  WILLIAM  S. 

Stay  on,  stranger.  New  York:  Farrar,  Straus  &  Young,  1954.  79p. 
An  account  of  Alice  Lloyd  and  her  efforts  to  build  a  school   in   the   Kentucky 
Mountains.   The   school,   now    known   as    Caney   Junior    College,    is    located    at 
Pippapass,  Kentucky. 

656.  FOLMSBEE,  STANLEY  J. 

East  Tennessee  University,  1840-1879,  predecessor  of  the  University  of  Ten- 
nessee. Knoxville:  University  of  Tennessee,  1959.  143p.  (University  of  Tennes- 
see Record,  62:3). 

657.  FULLER,  HUGH  E. 

Joseph  Kentron  and  his  Kingsley  Seminary,  Sullivan  Co.,  Tennessee.  Thesis. 
ETSC.  1953. 

658.  FURMAN,  LUCY 

Quare  women:  a  story  of  the  Kentucky  Mountains.  Boston:  Atlantic  Monthly, 
1923,  319p. 

"The  atmosphere  of  this  story,  its  background,  and  even  many  of  its  incidents 
arise  from  the  author's  connection  with  the  Hindman  Settlement  School  in 
Knotts  County,   Kentucky." 

659.  KENT,  GEORGE 

Campus  in  the  clouds.  Progressive  Education,  18:369-72    1941. 
(Condensed  version  appeared  in  Readers  Digest  N  1941    49-52). 

61 


660.  HATCHER,  O.  LATHAM 

A    Mountain    School;    a   study    made    by    the    Southern    Woman's    Educational 

Alliance  and   Konnarock   Training  School.   Richmond:    Garrett   &    Massie,    1930. 

248p. 

Konnarock   Training   School   is   a   mountain    mission   school,   located   in   Smyth 

Co.,  Virginia. 

661.  KOCH,  LUGIAN 

Commonwealth    College.    Progressive    Education     11:301-02     1934. 

662.  LYNN,  DENISE  D. 

Ann  Cobb.  MLirW.  Sum  1960.  50-54. 

A  tribute  to  Miss  Cobb,  a  long-time  teacher  at  the  Hindman  Settlement  School. 

663.  MORGAN,  LUCY 

Gift  from  the  hills.  Indianapolis:   Bobbs-Merrill,   1958.  314p. 

The  Penland  School  of  Handicrafts.  Penland,  N.  C. 

664.  OBENHAUS,  VICTOR 

Wholeness   vs.    holiness   in    the   mountains,    the    Pleasant    Hill    Academy     (Ten- 
nessee).  Religious   Education   37:359-66     1942. 

665.  PAGE,  A.  A. 

Pikesville    College:    its    contribution    to    the    educational    and    spiritual    life    of 
eastern  Kentucky.  Filson  Club  Historical  Quarterly.  31:23-27  1957. 

666.  PHILLIPS,  WENDELL  B. 

I  teach  in  a  hick  college.  Atlantic  Monthly.  149:327-32    1932. 

Author  is  a  member  of  the  faculty  of  Piedmont   College    (Georgia). 

667.  PHILLIPS,  WENDELL  B. 

Students  in  a  hick  college.  Atlantic  Monthly.   151:412-18    1933. 
Piedmont   College    (Georgia). 

668.  PINE  MOUNTAIN  SETTLEMENT  SCHOOL 

Findings  of   the  Pine   Mountain   Guidance   Institute,    held    at    Pine    Mountain, 
Harlan  County,  Kentucky.  August  20-26,  1939.  31  p. 

669.  RANDOLPH,  H.  S. 

The  Ashville   Farm   School— pioneers   in   educational   method.   MLirW.    O    1932 
16-20. 

670.  RICE,  SIDNEY  W. 

A  wilderness  road  led  to  destiny.  Southerner.  1:22-25    D   1949. 

Lincoln  Memorial  University,  Harrogate,  Tennessee. 

671.  RITCHIE,  ANDREW  J. 

The  Rabun  Industrial  School  and  mountain  school  extension  work  among  the 

mountain  whites.  Atlanta:   Byrd,   1906.  40p. 

Author  was  founder  of  the  school,  which  is  located  at  Rabun  Gap,  Georgia. 

672.  SCHOOLS    FOR    THE    MOUNTAINEER     (EDIT). 
New  Republic.  78:202-03    1934. 

672A.    STOVALL,  HENRY 

Farmer's  day  and  work  camp  at  Hazel  Green.  MLirW.  Spring  1944    30-34. 
Hazel   Green  Academy,   Hazel   Green,   Kentucky. 

673.  STUART,  JESSE 

Lesson  in  a  liberal  college  education.  Saturday  Review  of  Literature.  F  16,  1946 

26-27. 

Description    of    Stuart's    experience    in    the    creative    writing    class    at    Lincoln 

Memorial    University. 

673A.    TEMPLE,  WAYNE  C. 

Lincoln  Memorial  University.  MLirL.  Winter   1960    53-55. 

62 


674.  UMBARGER,  CATHERINE   C. 

Konnarock—  an  experiment   in   education.  ML&W.   Ap    1930    2-6. 
Description  of  the  Konnarock  Training  School  in  the  mountains  of  Virginia. 

675.  VOGEL,  JOHN 

This  happened  in  the  hills  of  Kentucky.  Grand  Rapids:  Zondervan,  1952.  382p. 

Vogel  is  founder  and  director  of  the  Galilean  Children's  Home  Corbin,  Ken- 
tucky. 

SCHOOL  AND  COMMUNITY 

676.  ADDINGTON,  VIOLET  WALTERS 

A  study  of  home-school  contacts  and  attitudes  toward  participation  in  Lincoln 
School,  Kingsport,  Tennessee.  Thesis.   ETSC.   1957. 

677.  CLAPP,  ELSIE  R. 

Community  schools  in  action,  New  York:   Viking,  1939.  429p. 

Study  of  two  experimental  rural  schools;  one  in  Arthurdale,  West  Virginia, 
and  the  other  in  Jefferson  County,  Kentucky. 

678.  DIEHL,  JAMES  A. 

A  proposed  program  of  public  relations  for  the  schools  of  Mason  County,  West 
Virginia.   Thesis.  Ohio  University.   1954. 

679.  EVANS,  IRVIN   C. 

A  study  of  20  parents  in  Carter  County,  Tennessee  selected  as  the  best  partners- 
in-instruction.   Thesis.   ETSC.   1952. 

680.  KING,  HOWARD  M. 

What  citizens  of  Sullivan  County  know  about  their  schools.  Thesis.  ETSC.  1952. 

681.  McKINNEY,  ZEYLAND 

The  country  farm-life  schools  of  North  Carolina.  Thesis.  Appalachian  State 
Teachers   College.    1953. 

682.  MILLER,  DELMAS  F. 

A  survey  of  the  public  relations  programs  of  West  Virginia  high  schools. 
Thesis.   West   Virginia   University.    1934. 

683.  MONTGOMERY,   CHARLES 

Community  uses  of  public  school  buildings  in  West  Virginia.  Thesis.  West 
Virginia  University.   1934. 

684.  MOYER,  EGBERT 

The  status  of  public  relations  activities  in  the  secondary  schools  of  Greene 
County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.   ETSC.   1956. 

685.  MYERS,  JERRY  C. 

What  the  patrons  of  the  elementary  school  of  Bristol,  Tennessee,  think  about 
their  schools.  Thesis.  ETSC.   1957. 

686.  OSBORNE,  JAMES  T. 

Community  use  of  school  resources  in  Cherokee  County,  North  Carolina,  as 
compared  with  a  national  trend.  Thesis.  University  of  North  Carolina.   1950. 

687.  ROBINETTE,  FRANK  L. 

What  the  eighth  grade  patrons  of  Scott  County  think  about  their  schools. 
Thesis.  ETSC.   1957. 

688.  STOUT,  RALPH  E. 

What  citizens  of  Carter  County  know  about   their  schools.  Thesis.  ETSC.   1953. 

689.  STRANG.  RUTH 

Planning  with  and  for  youth  in  a  rural-industrial  community.  Nation's  School. 
Ja  1949    41-43. 

Describes  the  activities  of  the  Alliance  for  Guidance  of  Rural  Youth  in  Harlan 
County,  Kentucky.  Program  required  the  cooperation  of  local  school  officials 
and  community  leaders. 

63 


690.  WILSON,  L.  CRAIG  AND   OTHERS 

School-community   improvement;   a   report  of  the   Greenbrier   County    program. 

New  York:  World  Book  Company,  1959.  350p. 

An  intensive  study  of  school-community  relations  in   Greenbrier   County,  West 

Virginia. 

TEACHERS  AND  OTHER  SCHOOL  PERSONNEL 

691.  AMBROSE,  L.   M. 

Teachers  for  Kentucky  mountain  rural  schools.  Kentucky  School  Journal.  O  1942 
37-40. 

692.  BONAR,  ROSS 

The  status  of  the  secondary  school  principal  of  West  Virginia  during  the  years 
1935-36.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University,  1937. 

693.  BRUCKER,  ELIZABETH  C. 

A  survey  of  the  status  of  the  retired  school   teacher  in  W7est  Virginia.  Thesis. 
Marshall  College.  1952. 

694.  COGER,  WILLIAM  N. 

A  study  of  administrative  and  supervisory  practices  of  principals  in  the  public 
school  system  of  Jefferson  County,  Alabama.  Thesis.  Alabama  State  College.  1954. 

695.  CRADDOCK,  ERNEST  B. 

A  study  of  the  status  of  the  elementary  principal  of  Logan  County,  West  Vir- 
ginia. Thesis.  Marshall  College.  1954. 

696.  DURR,  WILLIAM  H. 

The  status  of  school  board  members  of  West   Virginia.  Thesis.   West   Virginia 
University.  1940. 

697.  DILLOW,  NOLA  M. 

The    qualifications    and    instructional    program    of    100    elementary    geography 
teachers  in  northeastern  Tennessee.  Thesis.  ETSC.  1952. 

698.  EVERNDEN,  WILLIAM  L. 

The  professional  status  of  teachers  in  the  Southern  Appalachian  region.  Ed.D. 
University  of  Tennessee.  1960. 

699.  GRAY,  WAYNE  T. 

Factors  affecting  teacher  tenure  in  the  Appalachian  Highlands.  Rural  Sociology. 
13:295-307    1948. 

700.  HAYNES,  ADAM  A. 

The  background,  education,  and  experience  of  teachers  in  Rutherford  County, 
North  Carolina.  Thesis.  Furman  University.  1954. 

701.  KEEBLER,  ALLEEN  S. 

Problems    of    beginning    teachers    in    Washington    County,    Tennessee.    Thesis. 
ETSC.  1955. 

702.  KEYS,  ROBERT  KENNETH 

Some  problems  concerning  the  relations  of  administrators  and  beginning  teachers 
in  the  Washington  County  School  System,  1955-56.  Thesis.  ETSC.   1957. 

703.  Mcculloch,  jack  d. 

A  study  of  the  status  of  rural  teachers  in  East  Tennessee.  Thesis.  ETSC.   1951. 

704.  MASON,  CHARLES  D. 

A  survey  of  the  training  and  experience  of  secondary  principals  in   five  upper 
east  Tennessee  counties.  Thesis.  ETSC.  1957. 

705.  MERINAR,  ELMER  K. 

A  study  of  the  status  of  the  elementary  school  principal  of  West  Virginia.  Thesis. 
West  Virginia  University.   1933. 

64 


706*  rVcomparitonLI^Eparen.s  and  teachers  viewpoints  relative  to  teacher  com- 
petencies in  Johnson  City,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  Tennessee  Agricultural  &  In- 
dustrial University.  1952. 

707.    SEAY,  MAURICE  F. 

Nepotism  in  the  Kentucky  mountain  school.  ML&W.  O   l'J34    lb-18. 

707 \     STANBERRY,  THOMAS  W.  .  ,   _ 

The  economic  status  of  Knox   County   teachers.  Thesis.   University   of  Tennes- 
see. 1959. 

708     TAYLOR,   TAMES  M.  .„     _  _     t,     _ 

'    Teachers  attitudes  toward   their  profession   in   Greenville   County,   South   Caro- 
lina. Thesis.  Furman  University.    1952. 

7°9'    T^SracumraS?  activities  of  teachers  of  Greenville  County,  South  Carolina. 
Thesis.  Furman  University.  1952. 

LIBRARIES 

710'    Libmdef oSSfa  report  on  developments,  1930-1935.  Chicago:  American 
Library  Association,  1936.  215p. 

711.    BARKER,  TOMMIE  D. 

Library  facilities  in  the  Southern  Appalachians.  ML&Vl  .  Jl   1932    14-1/. 

712'    SookSte^o^services  in  eastern  Kentucky.  Thesis.  Columbia  University.  1940. 

712A.    BOOKMOBILES    BRING    MOHAMMED    TO    THE    MOUNTAINS 
ML&W.  Summer  1959   5-8. 
Describes   the  introduction  of  bookmobiles   in   the   Kentucky    mountains. 

713.  BROWN,  KENNETH  „..-,•,  n  1Q^    9* 
West  Virginia's  second  regional  library.  West   Virginia  Libraries.  D  1955    2-4. 
Discussion  of  the  planning  required  before  establishing  a  regional  library  in  an 
area  hitherto  without  library  service. 

714.  BULLEN,  ROBERT  W.  .        „         .        ..,    t    v,,. 
Survey   for   library   development   in    Fayette   and    Raleigh    Counties,   West    Vir- 
ginia. Charleston:  West  Virginia  Library  Commission,   1959.  50p.  proc. 

715.  CRIMMINS,  NORA  _n 
Rural  library  service  for  Hamilton  County,  Tennessee.  MLvW.  Ap  1932    ^8-30. 

716.  EDWARDS,  DOROTHY 

Romance  of  Kentucky  libraries.   Wtfcow   Library  Bulletin    17:293-9j     194^. 

Kentucky  packhorse  libraries. 

717.  EDWARDS,  EVELYN   LORRAINE  . 

The  reading  habits  of  200  adults  in  Kingsport,    Iennessee.  Thesis.  E1SC.   Uob. 

718.  HOWARD,   MONTICE  BISSINGER 

A  study  of  the  use  of  student  library  assistants  in  the  secondary  schools  ot  Last 
Tennessee.  Thesis.  ETSC.   1958. 

719     HUMBLE,  MARION 

In  the  Kentucky  mountains.  Journal  of  Adult  Education  1L6/-68    1939. 
Reading  habits   and   pack-horse  libraries   in   Jackson   County,   Kentucky. 

720.    LENSKI,  LOIS  .  .     .    „.,.  an    1Q,r 

Christmas  at  Huckleberry  Mountain  Library.  Horn   Book.  22:475-80     iy4b. 

Description  of  the  "only  rural  library  in  Henderson  County,  North  Carolina." 

65 


721.  LOWE,  CORNELIA 

Initiating   the  rural   library   program   in   Towns   and   Union   Counties,  Georgia. 
Thesis.  University  of  Georgia.  1948. 

722.  MILLS,  JOSEPHINE  J. 

An  investigation  of  the  reading  interest  of  the   junior   high   school  students  in 
Greeneville,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  ETSC.   1954. 

723.  PACK  HORSE  LIBRARY.  Rural  America.  O   1939    11-12. 
Description  of  the  pack  horse  libraries  in  the  mountains  of  Kentucky. 

724.  POUNDSTONE,  SALLY 

A   plan    for   regional    library   development    in    eastern    Kentucky.    Thesis.    Uni- 
versity of  Kentucky.   1955. 

725.  ROTHROCK,  MARY  U. 

Books  for  everybody.  ML&W.  Ap  1932.  10-13. 
Knox  County,  Tennessee. 

725A.    TENNESSEE.  LEGISLATIVE  COUNCIL  COMMITTEE 

Public  library  service  study.  Final  report.  Nashville,   1960.  61   numbered   pages, 

plus  appendices. 

Gives  much  useful  statistical  information  by  county. 

726.  THOMAS,  HELEN   WEBB 

A  survey  of   library  services   in   the   county   schools   of   Sullivan    County,   Ten- 
nessee. Thesis.  ETSC.   1958. 

727.  WILLIAMS,  BERTHA  L. 

A  survey  of  school  library  facilities  anil  services   in   four   selected   high   schools 
in  Jefferson  County,  Alabama.  Thesis.  Alabama  State  College.   1954. 

728.  WILSON,  LOUIS  R.  AND  EDWARD  A.  WIGHT 

County  library  service  in  the  South.  Chicago:   University  of  Chicago  Press,  1935. 
259p.  ' 

Several  of  the  demonstration  counties  used  as  a  base  for  this  study  are  in   the 
Southern  Appalachian  region. 

MISCELLANEOUS 

729.  AKINS,  ENOS  E. 

Disciplinary   beliefs  and  practices  of  selected  East  Tennessee   high  school  prin- 
cipals. Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.  1957. 

730.  ANGLIN,  FRANCES  B. 

A  follow-up  study  of  graduates  of  Roane  County  High  School,   1946-55.  Thesis. 
University  of  Tennessee.   1956. 

731.  BAILEY,  CHARLOTTE   P. 

A  study  of  the  development  of  special  education   in  Claiborne  County.  Thesis. 
ETSC.  1958. 

732.  BARKLEY,  ANNA   M. 

Local   history  stories   for   the   third   grade,   Washington   and   Sullivan    Counties, 
Tennessee.  Thesis.  ETSC.   1952. 

733.  BARRY,  HELEN  B. 

A  study  of  special  services  in  the  schools  of  Greenville  County,  South  Carolina. 
Thesis.  Furman  University.   1954. 

734.  BENSCHOTEN,  J.  A. 

Just  to  read  and  write.  World's  Work.  D  1930  77-80. 

Account  of  the  work  of  the  moonlight  schools. 

66 


735.  BRUNNER,  EDMUND 

Community  organization   and   adult   education,  a   five  year   experiment.    Chapel 
Hill:   University  of  Nortli   Carolina   Press,   1942.    124p. 

Experiment  was  conducted  by   the  Greenville  County    (S.C.)   Council    Eor   Com- 
munity Development. 

735A.    BYAR.  THOMAS  M. 

The  student  population  in  the  institutions  of  higher  education  in  the  Southern 
Appalachian  region,  1933-1958.  Ed.D.  University  of  Tennessee.   1959. 

736.  CARNEY,  MABEL 

Mountain  welfare  and  the  public  school.  MLirW .  Jl  1927    28-35. 

737.  COOK,  JOHN   H. 

A  study  of  the  mill  schools  of  North  Carolina.  New  York:   Columbia  University, 
1925.  55p.    (Teachers  College  Contributions  to  Education   178). 

738.  COOK,  NASH 

A    survey    of   the    school    lunch    program    in    Boone    County,     (West    Virginia) 
schools.  Thesis.   Marshall   College.    1952. 

739.  CYR,  FRANK  W. 

Curriculum  enrichment  and  redirection  of  rural  secondary  schools  in  the  moun- 
tain area.  ML&W.  Jl  1935    8-16. 

710.    DARNELL,  HAROLD  L. 

A  study  of  the  problems  of  sixth   grade  students   in   selected   schools   of   Scott 
County,  Virginia.  Thesis.  ETSC.  1957. 

741.  DAY,  DELLA  M. 

Buncombe  County  night  schools  carry  on|  ML&W.  Ap   1933    7-11. 

741A.    DELOZIER,  ROBERT  C. 

Public    school    enrollment    prediction    for    the    Southern    Appalachian    region. 
Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.   1959. 

742.  GAUMNITZ,  WALTER  H. 

Responsibility  of   the  school   for   underpriviledged   children.   Journal   of   Educa- 
tional Sociology   17:223-29.   1943. 

"A  very  important  underpriviledged  area  is  that  typified  by  the  southern  moun- 
tains." 

713.    GORE.  NINA   L. 

The  development  of  a  plan  for  parent  education   for   the  speech   handicapped 
children  in  Overton  County,  Tennesssee.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.   1955. 

744.  GRINDSTAFF,  DANA  R. 

A  study  of  the  program  of  vocational  rehabilitalion  in  Carter  County,  Tennes- 
see. Thesis.  ETSC.  1953. 

745.  HANCOCK,  HARRY  L. 

A   study  of  school  transportation,   Bradley   County.   Tennessee.   Thesis.   Univer- 
sity of  Tennessee.  1953. 

745A.    HARLESS,  N.  R. 

A  study  of  school  transportation,  Blount  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  Universil\ 
of  Tennessee.  1959. 

746.  HARLOW,  ALVIN 

Revolving  hot  lunch  program.  Educational  Forum  6:367-72    1942. 

Describes  the  activities  of  the  Save  the  Children  Federation  in  helping  provide 
school  lunch  programs  for  destitute  mountain  areas. 

747.  HATCHER,  O.  LATHAM 

A  guidance  program  for  Breathitt  County  young  people.  ML&W.  O  1934    19-22. 

748.  HATCHER,  O.  LATHAM 

Some  guidance  needs  of  mountain  boys  and  girls.  ML&W.  Ap  1931    8-13. 

67 


749.  HEADRICK,  WARREN  B. 

A  study  of  the  physical  plants  of  Blount  County  high  schools.  Thesis.  Uni- 
versity of  Tennessee.  1952. 

750.  HENDERSON,  HELEN  R. 

A   curriculum   study  in   a   mountain   district.   New   York:    Columbia   University, 
1937.   189p.    (Teachers  College    Contributions  to  Education  732). 
Study  was  made  in  Buchanan  County,  Virginia. 

751.  HOLDEN,  ANNA  AND  OTHERS 

Clinton,  Tennessee,  a  tentative  description  and  analysis  of  the  school  desegre- 
gation crisis.  New  York:  Anti-Defamation  League,   1957.  24p. 

752.  HUGHES,  FRANK  G. 

A  study  of  the  school  buildings  of  McMinn  County.  Thesis.  University  of  Ten- 
nessee. 1958. 

753.  HURST,  OTIS  C. 

Trends  in  the  social  studies  in  eighty  Tennessee  high  schools,  1931-1952.  Thesis. 
ETSC.   1952. 

754.  INNES,  THOMAS  C. 

A  study  of  some  problems  of  eighth  grade  students  of  John  Sevier  Junior 
High  School,  Kingsport,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  ETSC.  1957. 

755.  IRWIN,  FRANK  E. 

A  study  of  school  transportation,  Anderson  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  Uni- 
versity of  Tennessee.  1958. 

755A.    JOHNSON,  PAUL  M. 

Integration  in  West  Virginia  since  1954.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.   1960. 

756.  JONES,  WILLIAM 

Environmental  school  sanitation  of  an  eastern  Kentucky  county.  Thesis.  Uni- 
versity of  Kentucky.  1954. 

757.  LINKINOGGER,  JESSIE  V. 

The  effect  of  promotion  and  non-promotion  upon  the  subsequent  success  or 
failure  in  Richmond  School,  Clay  County  (West  Virginia).  Thesis.  Marshall 
College.  1952. 

758.  McELROY,  DON  DEAN 

A  comparative  analysis  of  the  results  of  the  Kraus-Weber  Test  for  minimum 
muscular  fitness  in  four  of  the  elementarv  schools  of  Johnson  City,  Tennessee. 
Thesis.  ETSC.  1957. 

759.  McKINNEY,  LAVONIA 

Factors  affecting  the  health  and  educational  growth  of  elementary  pupils  in 
three  selected  schools  of  Jefferson  County,  Alabama.  Thesis.  Alabama  State 
College.  1952. 

759A.    MARION,  LEONARD  M. 

A  guidance  program  for  the  schools  of  Hawkins  County.  Thesis.  University  of 
Tennessee.   1959. 

760.  MATHES,  WILETA 

A  study  of  problems  of  junior  high  school  students  of  Johnson  City,  Tennessee. 
Thesis.  ETSC.  1953. 

761.  MENEFEE,  ROBERT  G. 

The  Supreme  Court  decision  and  the  Appalachian  South.  New  South  O  1954 
1-11. 

762.  MILLER,  DONALD  W. 

Vocational  education  in  the  southern  mountains.  Education  50:429-31     1930. 

Plea  for  improved  programs  of  vocational  education. 

68 


763.  MONTGOMERY,  ERNEST  B. 

Some  factors  affecting  retardation  in  the  six  high  schools  of  Washington  County, 
Tennessee.  Thesis.  ETSC.  1952. 

764.  ORR,  THOMAS  B. 

A  follow-up  of  1952  graduates  of  Logan  High  School,  Logan,  West  Virginia. 
Thesis.  Marshall  College.  1953. 

765.  PERDUE,  MABEL  J. 

The  relation  of  the  hot  lunch  program  to  the  progress  of  pupils  in  the  Deep 
Water  School,  West  Virginia.  Thesis.   Marshall  College.    1952. 

766.  PETTIGREW,  THOMAS  F. 

Demographic  correlations  of  border-state  desegregation.  American  Sociological 
Review    22:683-89.   1957. 

A  study  of  the  pattern  of  acceptance  of  public  school  integration  in  selected 
Missouri  and  Kentucky  counties. 

767.  POWELL,  HANNAH  J. 

Pioneer  night  school.  ML&W.  O  1929.  11-12. 
North  Carolina  mountains. 

768.  RAINES,  CARROLL  C. 

A  study  of  school  transportation,  Hawkins  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  Uni- 
versity of  Tennessee.   1954. 

769.  RAMEY,  JAMES  M. 

Factors  influencing  social  status,  social  participation,  and  social  reputation  of 
the  children  in  the  elementary  school  of  Crum,  West  Virginia.  Thesis.  Marshall 
College.  1953. 

770.  REYNOLDS,  RUTH  ALLEN 

A  proposed  health  instruction  program  for  upper  elementary  grades  adaptable 
to  Carter  County.  Thesis.  ETSC.   1956. 

771.  ROMAGNOLI,  ALFONSO   L. 

Worker  education  in  West  Virginia;  a  study  of  union-university  cooperation. 
Thesis.   West  Virginia   University.    1957. 

772.  SANDERS,  RETTA  E. 

A  survev  of  Boone  County  (West  Virginia)  school  buildings.  Thesis.  Marshall 
College/ 1952. 

722A.    SELLS,  CECIL  O. 

A  study  of  pupil  transportation  in  Polk  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  Tennessee 
Polytechnic.    1959. 

773.  SLONE,  ALICE  H. 

We  build  a  school.  Practical  Home  Economics.  20:435-36    1942. 
Lotts  Creek  Community   School,   Knott   County,   Kentucky. 

774.  SMITH,  NENA  G. 

The  relationship  between  reading  capacity  and  reading  achievement  of  123 
third  grade  children  of  Morristown  and  Hamblen  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis. 
Tennessee  Agricultural  &  Industrial  University.  1952. 

775.  STEWART,  CORA  W. 

Moonlight  schools  for  the  emancipation  of  adult  illiterates.  New  York:   Dutton, 
1922.  194p. 

The  author  was  the  founder  of  moonlight  school  movement. 

776.  STONECIPHER,  E.  E. 

Hog  killing  time  in  Tennessee.  Progressive  Education.  20:23-25    1943. 
Describes   efforts    of   a    mountain    school    to    relate    educational    and    practical 
experience.  "Hog  killing  time"  was  used  as  a  unit  of  study. 

69 


777.  STRUNK,  FLONNIE 

A  study  of  pupil  transportation  in  Scott  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  University 
of  Tennessee.  1956. 

778.  STUMP,  ROY  J. 

The  effects  of  school  hus  transportation  upon  the  achievement  of  students  in 
Calhoun  County  High  School.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.   1942. 

779.  SWOPE,  PAUL  W. 

Pupil  transportation  in  West  Virginia,  1934-1955.  Thesis.  Marshall  College.  1957. 

779A.    TAYLOR,  ALVA   W. 

What  hot  lunches  do  for  mountain  school  children.  ML&W.  Spring  1944    15-18. 

780.  TURNER,   BYRON   J. 

What  parents  in  two  Lewis  County  communities  think  about  the  transportation 
of  their  children  to  a  consolidated  school.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University. 
1940. 

780A.    WEIR,   DONALD    E. 

A  guidance  program  for  McMinn  County  High  School.  Thesis.  University  of 
Tennessee.  1959. 

781.  WILDASIN,  FRANCES  W. 

An  analysis  of  problems  of  eighth  and  ninth  grade  students  in  the  junior  high 
school  of  Johnson  City,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  ETSC.   1952. 

782.  WILLIAMS,  DREW  B. 

A  study  of  pupil  transportation  in  Hancock  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  Uni- 
versity of  Tennessee.  1953. 

783.  WILSON,  ISABELLA 

Determining  objectives  for  homemaking  instruction.  New  York:  Columbia  Uni- 
versity, 1935  99p. 

'"The  instruction  of  white  students  in  the  junior  high  scliools  of  the  bituminous 
coal  fields  of  southern  West  Virginia." 

783A.    YOUMANS,  E.  GRANT 

Factors  in  educational  attainment.  Rural  Sociology.  24:21-28    1959. 

Study  of  439  youths  from  three  low  income  farming  areas  in  Kentucky. 

784.  ZUMSTEIN,  WILLIAM  C. 

A  study  of  school  transportation,  Morgan  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  Univer- 
sity of  Tennessee.   1953. 


70 


Agriculture 

This  listing  is  confined  almost  entirely  to  the  economic  and  sociological  aspects 
of  agr  culture.  Titles  dealing  with  the  science  and  technology  of  agriculture 
have  been  excluded  as  being  beyond  the  scope  of  this  work.  Such  material 
Is  welMnde^ed  and  may  be  approached  through  such  standard  tools  as 
Agricultural  Index  and  the  Bibliography  oj  Agriculture. 

?85-    ^St^ange^n  agriculture  of  Cumberland  County,  Tennessee.  Tennessee 
Agricultural   Experiment   Station.   Monograph    139.    194^. 

786'  OdgirandLSlPatkm  to  agriculture  of  industrial  workers  in  Kingsport,  Tennes- 
see.  Journal  of  Farm  Eco>w>nics.  38:828-36    l<b6. 

787.    AMBROSE,  LUTHER 

"Bucking"  the  depression.  ML&W.  Ja  1933    14-18. 

\dvocates  the  raising  of  goats  in  the  coal  camps  and  very  mountainous  areas 

as  the  only  practical  way  of  obtaining  an  adequate  supply  ot  milk. 

?88'  Ru^deTd^Vnelu^^oblems  and  prospects  in  Fayette  Raleigh  and  Summers 
Counties.  West  Virginia.  West  Virginia  Agricultural  Experiment  Station. 
Bulletin  444,  1960.  21p. 

789'  L™SngSh^omEe^  through  farm  adjustments  in  the  Red  Soil  area.  Eastern 
Highland  rim  of  Tennessee.  Tennessee  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bul- 
letin 245,  1955.  66p. 

790'  Cons^ition  projects  by  community  organizations  in  Tennessee  and  other 
southeastern   states.   Ph.D.   Cornell   University.   I960. 

791      BONDURVNT,  1.  H.  and  W.  D.  NICHOLLS 

Labor    supply    and    farm    production    on    eastern    Kentucky    farms.    Kentucky 
Agriculture   Experiment  Station.   Bulletin  475,   1945.  24p. 

79^     BONSER.  HOWARD  J.  _ 

Better    farming    practices    through    rural    community    organization.    Tennessee 
Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  286,  19;>8.  36p. 

"This   is   a   study   of   rural   community    improvement    clubs    in    East   Tennessee 
and  their  impact  on  the  adoption  of  certain  recommended  farming  practices. 

793.    BONSER.  HOWARD  J.  AND  J.  F.  DAVIS 

Electricity  on  farms  and  in  rural  homes  in  the  East  Tennessee  Valley.  Tennes- 
see Agricultural   Experiment   Station.    Bulletin   221,    1951. 

7H1.    BRASINGTON,  CLAYTON   F. 

Livestock    auction    markets    in    the    Appalachian    area;    methods    and    facilities. 
Washington:   GPO,  1959.  75p.    (USDA  Marketing  Research  Report  309). 

794A.    BREEDING,  CLARENCE  H. 

\pnraisal    of    vocational    education    in    agriculture    in    Clairborne    County    by 
business  and  professional  leaders.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.   1959. 

795.    CAROTHERS.  J.  EDWIN  . 

Poverty  stalks  the  small  farmer.  ML&W.  Winter   19o5    1/19- 

7'>6     CLAYTON    C.  F.  AND  W.  D.  NICHOLLS 

Land   utilization   in   Laurel   County,   Kentuckv.    Washington:    GPO,   1932.    lOOp. 
(USDA  Technical  Bulletin  289.) 

71 


*  I 


797.  COUGHENOUR,  C.   M.  AND  JOHN   R.  CHRISTIANSEN 

Kentucky  farmers  and  social  security.  Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment  Station. 
Progress  Report  44,   1956.  21  p.  proc. 

Farmers  in  two  mountain  counties  were  less  frequently  protected  by  Social 
Security  and  were  less  well  informed  concerning  benefits  than  those  in  one  non- 
mountain   county. 

798.  DESGHAMPS,  ALFRED  J. 

Land  use  in  Powell  County,  Kentucky.  Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky.  1954. 

799.  DURAND,  LOYAL  AND  E.  T.  BIRD 

The  Burley  tobacco  region  of  the  mountain  south.  Economic  Geography.  26:247- 
300     1950. 

799A.    EVANS,  HOMER   C.  AND   OTHERS 

Some  effects  of  price  and  income  support  programs  on   marginal  farms.   West 
Virginia  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.   Bulletin  451,   1961.   35p. 
Authors   conclude   that   price   and   income   support    programs   are   of   relatively 
little  help  to  the  marginal  farmer.    Second  phase  of  this  study  will   "examine 
in  detail  the  direct  effects  of  programs  on  the  Appalachian  Area  farmers." 

800.  FRANK,  BERNARD  AND  ROBERT  L.  REID 

Soil  erosion  in  a  mountain  county.  American  Forests.  42:310-12    1936. 

Cocke  County,  Tennessee. 

801.  GALLOWAY,  ROBERT   E. 

Part-time  farming  in  eastern  Kentucky.  Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment 
Station.   Bulletin   646,   1956,   28p. 

801A.    GAULT,  THOMAS  G. 

Rural  land  use  in  Franklin  County,  Tennessee.  Ed.D.  George  Peabody  College. 
1959. 

802.  GIBSON,  W.   L.   AND   FARRAR   V.   SHELTON 

Economic  land  classification  of  Pulaski  County.  Virginia  Agricultural  Experi- 
ment Station.  Bulletin  398,   1946.   12p. 

803.  GLENDINNING,  R.  M.  AND  E.  N.  TORBERT 

Agricultural  problems  in  Grainger  County,  Tennessee,  Economic  Geography. 
14:159-166    1938. 

803A.    GOOCH,  ERNEST  D.  AND   C.  D.   PHILLIPS 

Changes  in  the  market  movement  of  Kentucky  livestock.  Kentucky  Agricultural 
Experiment  Station.   Bulletin  672,   1960. 

The  state,  for  the  purposes  of  this  study,  was  divided  into  nine  market  areas. 
Much  statistical  data  is  included. 

804.  GRISSO,  ROBERT  D.  AND  JOSEPH   M.  JOHNSON 

Elements  of  success  in  marketing  Appalachian  apples.  Virginia  Agricultural 
Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  507,  1959.  43p. 

804A.    HILL,  JAMES  E. 

The  strawberry  industry  in  the  hilly  and  mountainous  regions  of  Tennessee. 
Thesis.   University  of  Tennessee.   1959. 

805.  HINTON,  BRUCE 

Significant  factors  influencing  quality  and  success  of  supervised  farming  pro- 
grams of  vocational  agriculture  students  in  seven  schools  of  East  Tennessee. 
Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.   1958. 

806.  HUGHES,  R.  B.  JR. 

Marginal  returns  on  agricultural  resources  in  a  southern  mountain  valley. 
Journal  of  Farm  Economics.  36:334-39    1954. 

Study  centered  in  Greene  County,  Tennessee. 


807.  JENSEN,  HARALD  R.  AND  LUTHER  KELLER 

A  general  picture  of  commercial  agriculture  in  eastern  Kentucky.  Kentucky 
Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Progress  Report  60,  1957.  I7p.  proc. 

808.  JOHNSON,  JACK  D. 

Economic   factors   affecting   cattle  prices   at   Appalachian   auctions.    Ph.D.    Iowa 

State  University.  1958. 

Covers  auctions  in   East   Tennessee,  Virginia  and   West   Virginia. 

809.  KINARD,  J.   D.  AND  M.  J.  PETERSON 

Farm  business  study  of  the  six  mile  area  of  Pickins  County  1940.  South  Caro- 
lina Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  340,  1942. 

810.  LANCASTER,  J.  L. 

Some  economic  aspects  of  the  changes  in  Towns  County  agriculture  during  the 
period  1934-1950.  Thesis.  University  of  Georgia.   1952. 

811.  LANHAM,  B.  F.  Jr.  AND  W.  V.  LAGRONE 

Increasing  incomes  and  conserving  resources  on  cotton-corn  farms  in  Marion 
County.  Alabama  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  25G,   1942. 

812.  LEMONS,  JAMES 

A  study  of  the  working  relationships  of  the  agricultural  extension  service  and 
the  vocational  agricultural  program  in  East  Tennessee.  Thesis.  University  of 
Tennessee.   1958. 

813.  LINDSEY,  QUENTIN  W. 

Farm  tenure;  the  framework  for  long-run  adjustments  in  southeastern  agri- 
culture, North  Carolina  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Technical  Bulletin 
110,  1954.  54p. 

Appears  also  as  Publication  13  of  the  Southeast  Land  Tenure  Research  Com- 
mittee. 

814.  LONG,  E.  J.  AND   P.   DORNER 

Excess  farm  population  and  the  loss  of  agricultural  capital.  Land  Economics 
30:363-68    1954. 

Study  deal  with  rural  Tennessee. 

815.  McCLURE,  JAMES  G.   K. 

Ten  years  of  the  Farmers  Federation.  ML&W.  Ap  1931    23-25. 

Account  of  cooperative  operating  in  the  mountain  counties  of  North  Carolina. 

816.  MALONEY,  FORREST  B. 

The  rural  land-use  of  Washington  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  University  of 
Tennessee.  1956. 

817.  MARTIN,  LEE  R.  AND  OTHERS 

The  effects  of  different  levels  of  management   and   capital   on   the  incomes   of 
small  farmers  in  the  South.  Journal  of  Farm  Eco>wmics  42:90-102    1960. 
Study  deals  with  Macon  County,  North  Carolina. 

818.  MASON,  JOHN  E.  AND  G.  W.  FORESTER 

Inventory  of  land  use  in  North  Carolina.  North  Carolina  Agricultural  Experi- 
ment Station.  Technical  Bulletin  93,  1950.  42p. 
Arranged  by  county. 

819.  MORGAN,  E.  L  AND  T.  N.  GEARREALD 

Farmer  cooperation  in  southwest  Virginia.  Virginia  Agricultural  Experiment 
Station.  Bulletin  331,   1941.  46p. 

820.  NICHOLLS,  W.  D.  AND  W.  L.  ROUSE 

Family  incomes  and  land  utilization  in  Knott  County,  Kentucky.  Kentucky 
Agricultural   Experiment  Station.  Bulletin   375,    1937. 

73 


821.  NICHOLLS,  W.  D.  AND  JOHN  H.  BONDURANT 

Farm    management    and    family    incomes    in    eastern    Kentucky.    Kentucky    Agri- 
cultural Experiment  Station.   Bulletin  491,   1946.  75p. 

"A   study  of   farm    production,    use   of    farm    land,    incomes,    and    family    labor 
supply  on  74  farms  in  the  Breathitt  Area." 

822.  NICHOLLS,  WILLIAM  H. 

The  effects  of  industrial  development  on  Tennessee  Valley  agriculture.  Journal 
of  Farm  Economics  38:1636-49    1956. 

823.  NICHOLLS.  WILLIAM   H. 

Factors  affecting  gross  farm  income  per  worker,  Upper  East   Tennessee  Valley, 
1899-1954.  Journal  of  Farm   Economics  42:356-62     1960. 

824.  PARMAN,  GUY  D. 

Geographic  factors  in  the  land  use  of  Greene  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  ETSC. 
1954. 

825.  PARRISH,   EARL  LESLIE 

Land  utilization  in  Roane  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee. 
1951. 

826.  PATTESON,  G.  W.  AND  OTHERS 

Classification    of    land    ownership    in    Bedford    County.    Virginia    Agricultural 
Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  500,  1958.  26p. 

827.  PATTESON,  G.  W.  AND  OTHERS 

Classification   of  land   ownership   in   Rockbridge   County.   Virginia   Agricultural 
Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  510,  1959.  29p. 

828.  PATTESON,  G.  W.  AND  J.  A.  McCARTNEY 

Economic  land   classification  of  Augusta  County.   Virginia   Agricultural   Experi- 
ment Station.  Bulletin  377,  1945.  lOp. 

829.  PATTESON,  G.  W.  AND  Z.  M.  K.  FULTON 

Economic  land  classification  of  Bath  County.  Virginia  Agricultural  Experiment 
Station.  Bulletin  447,  1952.  19p. 

830.  PATTESON,  G.  W.  AND  J.  A.   McCARTNEY 

Economic  land  classification  of  Botetourt  County.  Virginia  Agricultural  Experi- 
ment Station.  Bulletin   385,   1945.  9p. 

831.  PATTESON,  G.   K.  AND  Z.   M.   K.   FULTON 

Economic   land   classification   of   Carroll   County.   Virginia   Agricultural   Experi- 
ment Station.  Bulletin  442,  1950.  19p. 

832.  PATTESON,  G.  W.  AND  A.  J.  HARRIS 

Economic   land    classification   of   Clarke   County.    Virginia    Agricultural    Experi- 
ment Station.  Bulletin  448,  1952.  18p. 

833.  PATTESON,  G.  W.  AND  A.  J.  HARRIS 

Economic  land  classification  of  Culpeper  County.  Virginia  Agricultural  Experi- 
ment Station.  Bulletin  379,  1945.  7p. 

834.  PATTESON,  G.  W.  AND  Z.  M.  K.  FULTON 

Economic  land  classification  of  Grayson  County.   Virginia   Agricultural   Experi- 
ment Station.  Bulletin  392,  1946.  8p. 

835.  PATTESON,  G.  W.  AND  FARRAR  V.  SHELTON 

Economic  land   classification   of   Greene   County.   Virginia    Agricultural    Experi- 
ment Station.  Bulletin  372,  1945.  lOp. 

836.  PATTESON,  G.  W.  AND  S.  C.  SHULL 

Economic  land  classification  of  Loudoun  County.  Virginia  Agricultural  Experi- 
ment Station.  Bulletin  387,  1946.  8p. 

837.  PATTESON,  G.  W.  AND  S.  C.  SHULL 

Economic    land    classification    of    Shenandoah     County.     Virginia     Agricultural 
Experiment   Station.   Bulletin   376,    1945.   7p. 

74 


838.  PATTESON,  G.  W.  AND  Z.  M.  K.  FULTON 

Economic  land  classification  of  Smyth  County,  Virginia  Agricultural  Experi- 
ment Station.  Bulletin  446,  1951.  18p. 

839.  PATTESON,  G.  W.  AND  Z.  M.  K.  FULTON 

Economic  land  classification  of  Wythe  County.  Virginia  Agricultural  Experi- 
ment Station.  Bulletin  422,  1949.  20p. 

840.  PECK,  MILLARD  AND  OTHERS 

Economic  utilization  of  marginal  lands  in  Nicholas  and  Webster  Counties,  West 
Virginia.  Washington:    GPO,   1932.   64p.    (USDA   Technical   Bulletin   303). 

841.  PECK,  MILLARD 

Farm  or  forest  in  the  West  Virginia  Appalachians.  Journal  of  Farm  Economics 
11:422-35    1929. 

842.  RUTTAN,  VERNON  W. 

The  impact  of  urban-industrial  development  on  agriculture  in  the  Tennessee 
Valley  and  the  Southeast.  Journal  of  Farm  Economics  37:38-50    1955. 

843.  SINGH,  HAR  S. 

Evaluation  of  alternative  income  opportunities  for  farm  operators  in  Macon 
County,  North  Carolina.   Ph.D.  North   Carolina  State   College.   1959. 

844.  SMITH,  DICK  W. 

Economic  levels  of  forage  and  grain  production  on  dairy  farms  in  East  Ten- 
nessee. Thesis.   University  of  Tennessee.   1956. 

845.  SMITH,  J.  RUSSELL 

Farming  Appalachia.  American  Review  of  Reviews.  53:329-36    1916. 

"The  point  of  this  interesting  and  informing  tale  is  that  we  should  teach  our 
mountain  farmer  true  mountain  agriculture"    (as  in  Corsica). 

846.  SPILLMAN,  CLAUDE  O. 

The  relationship  of  the  economic  production  of  farmers  of  the  southern  Appa- 
lachian region  to  certain  social  factors.   Ph.D.   University  of  Kentucky.    1939. 

847.  TANG,  ANTHONY  M. 

Economic  development  in  the  Southern  Piedmont  1860-1950;  its  impact  on 
agriculture.  Chapel  Hill:  University  of  North  Carolina  Press,  1958.  256p. 

848.  VERNON,  J.  J| 

Economic  study  of  the  organization  and  management  of  beef  cattle  and  other 
types  of  farms  in  Russell  County.  Virginia  Agricultural  Experiment  Station. 
Technical  Bulletin  71,   1941.   186p. 

849.  VERNON,  J.   J.   AND   OTHERS 

Study  of  the  organization  and  management  of  farmers  in  Grayson  County,  Vir- 
ginia. Virginia  Agricultural  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  304,  1936. 

850.  VERNON,  J.  J. 

Why  some  farmers  are  more  successful  than  others.  Virginia  Agricultural 
Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  341,  1942.  19p. 

Study  made  in  Russell  County,  Virginia. 

851.  WEITZELL,   E.   C. 

Certain  economic  aspects  of  agriculture  in  Jackson  County  soil  conservation 
area.   West    Virginia  Agricultural    Experiment    Station.    Bulletin    291,    1939.   56p. 

852.  WELCH,  FRANK  J. 

Helping  low  income  farm  families.  ML&W.  Winter  1955    20-27. 

853.  WHEELER,  JESSE  H. 

Land  use  in  Greenbrier  County,  West  Virginia.  Ph.D.  University  of  Chicago. 
1950. 

75 


854.  WOOFTER,  T.  J.  Jr. 

Rural  relief  and  the  Back-to-the-Farm-Movement.  Social  Forces.  14:382-88    1936. 

"In  the  Appalachian-Ozark  region  25  percent  of  the  relief  clients  with  previous 
non-agricultural  occupation  were  currently  employed  in  Agriculture.   .   ." 

FORESTRY 

855.  BENNETT,  H.  D. 

Lessons  in  Appalachian  forestry.  Cincinnati:  Appalachian  Hardwood  Manu- 
facturers, Inc.,  1950.  47p. 

Written  as  a  text  for  elementary  and  secondary  schools.  Attempts  to  present 
"in  plain  non-technical  language,  a  step-by-step  story  of  the  forests,  forestry 
and  logging,  and  their  relation  to  the  people  of  the  Appalachian  Hardwood 
Region." 

856.  BRITT,  RAY  T.  AND  JOE  A.  MARTIN 

Marketing  sawtimber  and  pulpwood.  Tennessee  Agricultural  Experiment  Sta- 
tion. Bulletin  295,  1959.  27p. 

Discussion  based  on  records  of  215  forest  landowners  in  McMinn,  Cumberland 
and  Hardin  Counties,  Tennessee. 

857.  CRAIG,  RONALD  B. 

Forestry  in  the  economic  life  of  Knott  County,  Kentucky.  Kentucky  Agricul- 
tural Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  326,  1932.  39p. 

858.  DOOLITTLE,  WARREN  T. 

Site  index  comparisons  for  several  forest  species  in  the  Southern  Appalachians. 
Soil  Science  Society  of  America.  Proceedings  22:455-58    1958. 

"This  paper  gives  methods  and  results  of  a  study  of  relationships  of  site  indices 
of  10  tree  species  common  in  the  Southern  Appalachians." 

859.  DUERR,  WILLIAM  A. 

The  economic  problems  of  forestry  in  the  Appalachian  Region.  Cambridge: 
Harvard  University  Press,   1949.  317p.    (Harvard  Economic  Studies  84). 

860.  DUERR,  WILLIAM  A.  AND   OTHERS 

Farms  and  forests  of  eastern  Kentucky  in  relation  to  population  and  income. 
Kentucky  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  507,  1947.  56p. 

861.  DUERR,  WILLIAM  A.  AND  R.  O.  GUSTAFSON 

Management  of  forests  in  an  eastern  Kentucky  area.  Kentucky  Agricultural 
Experiment   Station.   Bulletin   518.    1948.    122p. 

Area  studied  consists  of  half-million  acres  in  Breathitt,  Knott  and  Perry  counties. 

862.  DUERR,  WILLIAM  A.  AND  OTHERS 

Timber-products  marketing  in  eastern  Kentucky.  Kentucky  Agricultural  Experi- 
ment Station.  Bulletin  488,  1946.  95p. 

863.  KILBOURNE,  RICHARD 

Watershed  improvement  in  the  Tennessee  Valley.  Journal  of  Forestry  58:294-96 
1960. 

864.  LEWIS,  CHARLES  D. 

Government  forests  and  the  mountain  problem.  ML&W.  Ja  1931    2-9. 

865.  NADLER,  HARRY 

The  journey  back  to  a  "Green  Gold"  economy.  ML&W.  Winter  1959    45-49. 

Author  suggests  that  forestry  and  reforestation  may  be  one  of  the  solutions  for 
the  declining  economy  of  eastern  Kentucky  and  other  worked-out  coal  areas. 

866.  NORTH   CAROLINA.   Department   of   Conservation   &   Development.    Division 
of  Forestry. 

Sawmills  and  lumber  production  for  26  counties  in  western  North  Carolina. 
1959.  lip. 

76 


867.  SHEA,  JOHN  P. 

Our  pappies  burned  the  woods.  American  Forests  46:159-62    1940. 

"As  a  psychologist  I  was  supposed  to  find  the  'inner-most'  reason  why  inhabi- 
tants of  the  forest  lands  of  the  South  cling  persistently  to  the  custom  of 
burning  the  woods."  Study  conducted  in  the  "southernmost  spur  of  the  Blue 
Ridge  Mountains." 

868.  TENNESSEE  VALLEY  AUTHORITY.  Division  of  Forestry  Relations. 
Hardwood  logging  methods  and  cost  in  the  Tennessee  Valley.  Norris,  Tennessee, 
1960.  35p. 

869.  UNITED  STATES.  Department  of  Agriculture. 

Report  of  the  Secretary  of  Agriculture  in  relation  to  the  forests,  rivers,  and 
mountains  of  the  Southern  Appalachian  Region.  Washington:  GPO,  1902.  210p. 
Extensive  treatment  of  forests  and   lumbering  practices  of  the   time. 

870.  WEBB,  GEORGE  W. 

The  hardwood  lumber  industry  of  the  eastern  highland  rim.  Journal  of  the 
Tennessee  Academy  of  Sciences  32:216-27    1957. 

871.  WEITZELL,  E.  C.  AND  L.   F.   MILLER 

Forest-land  utilization  in  Nicholas  and  Webster  Counties,  West  Virginia.  West 
Virginia  Agricultural  Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  309,   1943.  66p. 


77 


Folklore,  Customs,  Music  and  Speech 

The  literature  on  the  folklore,  customs,  crafts,  music  and  speech  of  the  Southern 
Appalachians  is  enormous.  Fortunately,  this  is  also  the  area  in  which  the 
bibliographers  have  been  the  most  active.  Therefore,  it  seemed  desirable  to 
limit  this  listing  to  (1)  the  more  important  contributions  and  (2)  to  those 
which  have  not  appeared  in  other  bibliographies. 

BIBLIOGRAPHY 

872.  HAYWOOD,  CHARLES 

A  bibliography  of  North  American  folklore  and  folksong.  New  York:  Green- 
burg,  1951.  1292p. 

This  without  question  the  best  work  in  the  field.  It  includes  folkloie,  music, 
speech,  art  and  customs.  It  is  easy  to  use  and  is  well-indexed.  Pp.  236-289  are 
devoted  to  "The  South  and  Southern  Highlands." 

873.  LAWLESS,  RAY  M. 

Folksingers  and  folksongs  in  America.  New  York:  Duel],  Sloan  and  Co.,  I960. 
662p. 

Subtitle  reads  "a  handbook  of  biography,  bibliography  and  discography."  In- 
cludes biographies  of  singers,  articles  on  folk-music  instruments,  noted  collections 
and  collectors,  a  checklist  of  folksong  titles,  and  a  listing  of  long-playing  records. 

BIBLIOGRAPHY-CURRENT 

874.  Southern  Folklore  Quarterly:  Folklore  bibliography. 

The  March  issue  of  the  Southern  Folklore  Quarterly  includes  a  comprehensive 
bibliography  of  the  titles  in  the  field  of  folklore  (including  crafts  and  speech) 
appearing  during  the  preceeding  year.  International  in  scope. 

FOLKLORE  AND  CUSTOMS 

875.  BOSHEARS,  FRANCES 

Proverbial  comparisons  from  an  east  Tennessee  county.  Tennessee  Folklore 
Society.  Bulletin  20:27-41    1954. 

876.  BOSHEARS,  FRANCES 

The  Shivaree.  Tennessee  Folklore  Society.  Bulletin   19:65-67  1953. 

"Describes  this  wedding  custom  in  Scott   and   Morgan   Counties,  Tennessee." 

877.  BRUSH,  FREDERICK 

Hill  doctor;  tells  in  story  and  ballads,  tales  of  the  Appalachians.  Selingsgrove, 
Pa.:   Susquehanna   University  Press,   1956.    142p. 

878.  CAMPBELL,  MARIE 

Festivals  in  a  mountain  community.  Childhood  Education.  S  1939    25-28. 

879.  CAMPBELL,  MARIE 

Survivals  of  old  folk  drama  in  Kentucky  mountains.  Journal  of  American  Folk- 
lore. 51:10-24    1938. 

880.  CAMPBELL,  MARIE 

Tales   from    the  cloud   walking   country.    Bloomington:    University    of    Indiana 

Press,  1958.  270p. 

78  tales  recorded  from  the  oral  traditions  of  the  eastern  Kentucky  mountains. 

881.  COBB,  ANN 

Kinfolks;  Kentucky  mountain  rhymes.  Boston:   Houghton  Mifflin,  1922.  82p. 

882.  COMBS.  JOSIAH  H. 

Some  Kentucky  highland  stories.  Kentucky  Folklore  Record  4:45-61     1958. 

883.  CORNETT,  ELIZABETH  B. 

Belief  tales  of  Knott  and  Perry  counties.  Kentucky  Folklore  Record.  2:69-75    1956. 

78 


884.  CREDLE,  ELLIS 

Tall   tales  from   the   high   hills   and  other  stories.  New   York:    Thomas   Nelson, 

1957.  156p. 

884A.    ERNST,  HARRY 

Folk  arts  thrive  in  West  Virginia  schools.  ML&W.  34:2  5-6    1958. 
Discussion  of  the  folk  arts  program  in  the  schools  of  Logan  County,  W.  Ya. 

885.  FARR,  T.  J. 

Riddles  and  superstitions  of  middle  Tennessee.    Journal   of   American    Folklore 

48:18-36    1936. 

"Collected  in  the  mountain  and  semi-mountain  region  of  Tennessee." 

886.  GLASSCOCK,  MRS.  H. 

Wetzel  County  folklore.  West   Virginia  Folklore.  5:21-40    1955. 

887.  HALL,  JOSEPH  S. 

Bear-hunting    stories    from     the    Great    Smokies.    Tennessee    Folklore    Society. 

Bulletin  23:67-75    1957. 

"Texts  of  4  anecdotes  from  western  North  Carolina." 

888.  HALPERT,  HERBERT 

East    Tennessee    question-and-answer     tall     tales.     Tennessee    Folklore     Society. 
Bulletin   18:101-03    1952. 

889.  Mcdowell,  flora  l. 

Folk  dances  of  Tennessee.  Berea:  Council  of  the  Southern  Mountains,  64p. 

890.  MATHES,  C.  HODGE 

Tall   tales  from   Old  Smoky.   Kingsport:    Southern   Publishers,    1952.   241p. 

891.  MUSICK,  RUTH  ANN 

Barbour  County  folklore.  West   Virginia  Folklore  6:40-51     1956. 

892.  MUSICK,  RUTH  ANN 

Gilmer  County  folklore.   West    Virginia  Folklore  10:51-68    1960. 

893.  MUSICK,  RUTH  ANN 

Harrison  County  folklore.   West   Virginia  Folklore  8:2-16    1958. 

894.  MUSICK,  RUTH  ANN 

More  stories  of  the  mine.  West  Virginia  Folklore  10:18-36    1960. 

895.  MUSICK,  RUTH  ANN 

Roane  County  folklore.  West   Virginia  Folklore  9:17-59    1959. 

896.  MUSICK,  RUTH  ANN 

Stories  about  mines.   West   Virginia  Folklore  8:54-68    1958. 

897.  ROBERTS,  LEONARD 

Floyd  County  folklore.  Kentucky  Folklore  Record  2:33-66    1956. 

898.  ROBERTS,  LEONARD 

I  bought  me  a  dog.  Berea:   Council  of  the  Southern   Mountains,   1951,   np, 
A  collection  of  "a  dozen  authentic  folktales  from  the  southern  mountains." 

899.  ROBERTS,  LEONARD 

Nippy   and    the   Yankee    Doodle.    Berea:    Council    of    the   Southern    Mountains. 

1958.  np. 

A  collection  of   10  folk  tales  from   the   southern  mountains. 

900.  ROBERTS,  LEONARD 

Snick  and  snack;  folktales  from  Wayne  County,  Kentucky.  ML&W  36:43-47    1960. 

901.  ROBERTS,  LEONARD 

South  from  Hell-fer-Sartin.  Lexington:  University  of  Kentucky  Press,  1955.  287p. 
A  collection  of  folk  tales  gathered  from  an  isolated  area  in  southern  Kentucky. 


902.  ROGERS,  E.  G. 

An  East  Tennessee  collection  of  friendship   verses.  Tennessee   Folklore  Society. 
Bulletin  23:13-25    1957. 

903.  ROGERS,  E.  G. 

Some    East    Tennessee    figurative    exaggerations.    Tennessee    Folklore    Society. 
Bulletin  19:36-40    1953. 

904.  ROGERS,  E.  G. 

Tall  tales  from  Tennessee.  Southern  Folklore  Quarterly   19:237-42    1955. 

905.  SMITH,  FRANK  H. 

The  Appalachian  square  dance.  Rerea:  Berea  College,  1955.  86p. 

"Contains  a   large   collection   of   dance  figures,   calls   and    tunes,    illustrated    by 

drawings  and  photographs." 

906.  SUTHERLAND,  E.  J. 

Folk  games  from  Frying  Pan   Creek   in   Dickenson   County,   Virginia.   Southern 
Folklore  Quarterly    10:239-66    1946. 

907.  THOMAS,  JEAN 

Devil's  ditties,  being  stories  of  the  Kentucky  mountains.  Chicago:   W.  W.   Hat- 
field, 1931.  180p. 

908.  WALLACE,  DONALD 

Beliefs  and  beliefs  tales   from   McCreary  County,  Kentucky.   Kentucky  Folklore 
Record  3:133-37    1957. 

908A.    WASHINGTON,   MARY 

The  folklore  of  the  Cumberlands  as  reflected   in   the   writings   of  Jesse  Stuart. 
Ph.D.  University  of  Pennsylvania,   i960. 

909.  WEST,  JOHN  F. 

"Haints"  I  haven't  known.  North  Carolina  Folklore.  D  1957    13-15. 

Ghost  stories  from  Wilkes  County,  N.  C. 

910.  WHITE,  DONALD 

The  Hatfield  story.  West  Virginia  Folklore  6:54-68    1956. 

911.  WILLIAMS,  GRATIS 

Ballads  and  songs  of  eastern  Kentucky.  Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky.  1937. 

912.  WILLIAMS,  CRATIS 

Fabulous  characters  in  the  southern  mountains.  North  Carolina  Folklore.  D  1958 
1-6. 

913.  WILLIAMS,  CRATIS 

Lawrence  County  superstitions.  Kentucky  Folklore  Record  2:137-40    1956. 

914.  WOODRIDGE,  HENSLEY  C.  AND  D.  K.  WILGUS 

Bibliography  of  Kentucky  folklore  for   1956.  Kentucky  Folklore  Record  3:17-28 

1957. 

"It  is  the  purpose  of  this  bibliography  to  list  all  books,  articles,  book  reviews, 

and  recordings  dealing  with  Kentucky  folklore  that  appeared  in  1956." 

Bibliography  of  Kentucky  folklore  1957.  Kentucky  Folklore  Record 

4:15-28    1958. 

Bibliography   of   Kentucky   folklore   for    1958.   Kentucky    Folklore 

Record  5:15-31     1959. 

Bibliography    of    Kentucky    folklore    for    1959.    Kentucky    Folklore 

Record  6:21-30    1960. 

915.  WRIGHT,  KATHARINE 

Mountain  Christmas.  Atlantic  166:727-31     1940. 

Description  of  Christmas  customs   in   Pine  Mountain,   Kentucky. 

MUSIC 

916.  BRYAN,  CHARLES  F. 

The  Appalachian  Mountain  and  hammered  dulcimers.  Tennessee  Folklore  Society 
Bulletin   18:1-5    1952 

80 


917.  BRYAN,  CHARLES  F. 

The  Appalachian  Mountain  dulcimer  enigma.  Tennessee  Folk  Society.  Bulletin 
20:86-90    1954. 

918.  CAMBIAIRE,  C.  P. 

East  Tennessee  and  western  Virginia  mountain  ballads.  London:  Mitre,  1934. 
179p. 

919.  CAMPBELL,  MARIE 

Answering-back  song-ballads.  Tennessee  Folklore  Society.  Bulletin  24:3-10    1958. 

920.  CAMPBELL,  OLIVE  AND  CECIL  J.  SHARP 

English  folk  songs  from  the  Southern  Appalachians.  New  York:  Putnam,  1917. 
341p. 

921.  COMBS.  JOSIAH  H. 

Folk-songs  du  Midi  des  Etats— Unis.  Paris:  Les  Presses  Universitaires,  1925.  230p. 

922.  DAVIS,  ARTHUR  K. 

Folk-songs  of  Virginia;  a  descriptive  index  and  classification  of  material  collected 
under  the  auspices  of  the  Virginia  Folklore  Society.  Durham:  Duke  University 
Press,  1949.  389p. 

923.  HAUN,  MILDRER  E. 

Cocke  County  ballads  and  songs.  Thesis.  Vanderbilt.  1937. 

924.  HENRY,  MELLINGER  E. 

Folk-songs  from  the  Southern  Highlands.  New  York:  J.  J.  Augustin,  1938.  460p. 

925.  HENRY,  MELLINGER  E. 

Songs  sung  in  the  Southern  Appalachians.  London:   Mitre,  1934.  253p. 

926.  HILLBILLY  MUSIC 

A  symposium  on  a  controversial  subject.  MLirW.  Summer  1959   34-42. 

927.  JACKSON,  GEORGE  P. 

White  spirituals  in  the  southern  uplands.  Chapel  Hill:  University  of  North 
Carolina  Press,  1933.  444p. 

928.  JEFFREYS,  A.  W. 

Tuning  and  playing  the  Appalachian  dulcimer.  Staunton,  Virginia:  Appalachian 
Dulcimer   Co.,    1958.    22p. 

929.  KIRKLAND,   EDWIN   C. 

Check  list  of  the  titles  of  Tennessee  folk  songs.  Journal  of  American   Folklore. 
59:423-76   1946. 
Sources  are  given. 

930.  MASON,  ROBERT  L. 

Ten  old  English  ballads  in  Middle  Tennessee.  Southern  Folklore  Quarterly. 
11:119-37    1947. 

931.  MUSICK,  RUTH  ANN 

Ballads,  folks  songs  and  folk  tales  from  West  Virginia.  Morgantown:  West  Vir- 
ginia University  Library,  1960.  71  p. 

932.  NILES,  JOHN  J. 

Ballads,  carols  and  tragic  legends  from  the  Southern  Appalachian  mountains. 
New  York:  Schirmer,  1937.  20p. 

933.  NILES,  JOHN   J. 

More  songs  of  the  hill  folk.  New  York:  Schirmer,  1936.  20p. 

934.  NILES,  JOHN  J. 

Songs  of  the  hill  folk.  New  York:  Schirmer,  nd.  25p. 

935.  OWENS,  BESS  A. 

Songs  of  the  Cumberland.  Journal  of  American  Folklore  49:215-42    1936. 

81 


936.  PUTNAM,  JOHN  F. 

The  plucked  dulcimer  of  the  southern  mountains.  Berea:  Council  of  the  South- 
ern Mountains,   1957.   14p. 

937.  REECE,  W.  TODD 

Mores  of  mountain  music.  North  Carolina  Folklore.  D  I960  32-37. 

938.  RICHARDSON,  ETHEL  J. 

American  mountain  songs.  New  York:  Greenberg,  1955.  120p. 
"Notes  on  the  songs."  ppl05-19. 

939.  RITCHIE,  JEAN 

A  garland  of  mountain  songs.  New  York:   Broadcast  Music,  1953.  69p. 

940.  RITCHIE,  JEAN 

Singing  family  of  the  Cumherlands.  New  York:   Oxford   University  Press,   1955. 
282p. 

Account  of  the  life  of  the  Ritchie  family.  Contains   words  and   music   to  over 
forty  folk  songs. 

941.  RITCHIE,  JEAN 

The  swapping  song  book.  New  York:  Oxford  University  Press,  1952.  91p. 
A  collection  of  21  songs  from  the  Cumberland  Mountains. 

942.  SCARBOROUGH,  DORTHY 

A  song  catcher  in  southern  mountains.  New   York:   Columbia  University   Press, 
1937.  476p. 

943.  SEEGER,  CHARLES 

The  Appalachian  dulcimer.  Journal  of  American  Folklore.  71:40-51    1958. 

944.  SHARP,  CECIL  J. 

English   folk  songs  from   the  Southern  Appalachians.   New   York:    Oxford   Uni- 
versity Press,  1932,  1952.  2  vols. 

945.  TAYLOR,  VERNON  H. 

From   fancy   to  fact   in   dulcimer  discoveries.    Tennessee  Folk   Society.  Bulletin. 
23:109-13    1957. 

946.  THOMAS,  JEAN 

The  singin'  fiddler  of  Lost  Hope  Hollow.  New  York:   Dulton,   1938.  242p. 
Biography  of  Jilson  Setters,  the  blind  "Singin'  Fiddler." 

947.  THOMAS,  JEAN   AND   JOSEPH   FEEDER 

The   singin'    gatherin';    tunes    from    the    Southern    Appalachians.    New    York: 
Silver,  Burdett  Co.,   1939.   113p. 

948.  WILGUS,  D.  K. 

Folksongs  of  Kentucky,  east  and  west.  Kentucky  Folklore  Record.  3:89-118    1957. 

949.  WILSON,  GORDON 
Breakdowns.  ML&W.  O  1925    20-25. 

SPEECH 

950.  BERREY,  LESTER  V. 

Southern  mountain  dialect.  American  Speech.   15:45-54   1940. 

951.  BRAY,  ROSE  ALTIZER 

Disappearing  dialect.  Antioch  Revieie.  10:279-88    1950. 

Discussion  of  speech  in  the  Appalachian  Mountains.  Many  examples. 

952.  CARPENTER,  CHARLES 

Variations  in  the  southern  mountain  dialect.  American  Speech.  8:22-25    1933. 

953.  COLEMAN,  WILMA 

Mountain  dialect  in  north  Georgia.  Thesis.  University  of  Georgia.   1936. 

82 


951.    GOMBS,  JOSIAH   H. 

Language  of  the  southern  highlanders.  PMLA.   16:302-22  1931. 

955.    DAVISON,  ZETA  C. 

Word-list   from   the   Appalachians  and   the    Piedmont    area   of   North    Carolina. 
American  Dialect  Society.  Publication.  19:8-14    1953. 

95G.    FARR,  T.  J. 

Language  of  the  Tennessee  mountains  regions.  American  Speech.  14:89-92    1939. 

957.  HALL,  JOSEPH  S. 

The   phonetics   of   Great    Smoky    Mountain    speech.    New    York:    King's    Grown 
Press,  1942.  HOp. 

957A.    HARRIS,  JESSE  W. 

The  dialect  of  Appalachia  in  Southern  Illinois.  American  Speech.  21:96-99    1946. 

958.  MATTHIAS,  V.  P. 

Folk  speech  of  Pine  Mountain,  Kentucky.  American  Speech.  21:188-92    1946. 

958A.    MAURER,  DAVID  W. 

The  argot  of  the  moonshiner.  American  Speech.  24:3-13    1949. 

959.  TINKLER,  MAY  C. 

Newspaper  English  of  Marshall  County,  Alabama.  Southern  Folklore  Quarterly 
21:154-59  1957. 

960.  WESTOVER,  J.  HUTSON 

Highland  language  of  the  Cumberland  coal  country.  ML&W.  Fall  1960    18-21. 

960A.    WILLIAMS,  CRATIS 

The  "R"  in  mountain  speech.  ML&W.  Spring  1961    5-8. 

"The  mountaineer's   emphasis  on   a   heavy  r  is   a   general   characteristic   of   his 
speech  from  Pennsylvania  to  Georgia." 

961.  WOOD,  GORDON 

A  list  of  words  from  Tennessee.  American  Dialect  Society.  Publication  29:3-18. 
1958. 

962.  WOODBRIDGE,  HENSELY  C. 

A   tentative  bibliography  of  Kentucky   speech.   American   Dialect   Society.   Pub- 
lication. 30:17-37    1958. 

CRAFTS 

963.  ARNOLD,  DORTHY  A. 

Some  recent   contributions  of   the   Cherokee   Indians  of  North   Carolina   to   the 
crafts  of  the  Southern  Highlands.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.   1952. 

964.  COMSTOCK,  HENRY  B. 

Folk  toys  are  back  again.  ML&W.  Fall   1960    41-45. 

Describes  the  manufacture  and  sale  of  folk  toys  in  the  Boone,  North  Carolina 
area. 

965.  CO-OP  turns  its  hands  to  hooking  rugs.  Business  Week.  Je  24,  1944  44. 

966.  EARNINGS  of  handicraft  workers  in  southern  mountain  regions.  Monthly  Labor 
Review.  Jl   1935  146-49. 

967.  EATON,  ALLEN  H. 

Handicrafts   in   the  Southern   Highlands.   New   York:    Russell   Sage   Foundation, 

1937.  370p. 

"Selected  bibliography"  pp349-55. 

968.  EATON,  ALLEN  H. 

The  mountain  handicrafts:   their  importance  to  the  country  and  to  the  people 
in  the  mountain  homes.  ML&W.  Jl   1930    22-30. 

83 


969.  FORD,  HOWARD  C. 

Southern  Highland  artcrafts.  School  Arts.  42:264-60    1943. 
A  directory  of  craft  centers  in  the  Southern  Appalachians. 

970.  GOODRICH,  FRANCES  L. 

Mountain  homespun.  New  Haven:  Yale  University  Press,  1931.  91  p. 

971.  HODGES,  SIDNEY  CECIL 

Handicrafts  in  Sevier  County,  Tennessee.  Thesis.  University  of  Tennessee.   1951. 

972.  NYLON  INVADES  THE  SMOKIES. 
Business  Week  Je  24,  1950  84. 

Short  article  on  the  weaving  and  selling  of  handbags  woven  of  nylon  by  mountain 
families. 

973.  ROSS,  CHARLES  R. 

Twenty  years  with  our  last  pioneers.  Travel  Ja  1945    22-25. 

Arts  and  crafts  of  the  Georgia  mountaineers. 

974.  WEAVER,  EMMA 

Crafts   in    the   Southern    Highlands,    Asheville:    Southern    Highland    Handicraft 

Guild,  1958.  48p. 

Includes  photographs  of  craftsmen  and  their  products. 

See  Edwards  item  193-253  for  titles  published  prior  to  1936. 


84 


Miscellaneous  Subjects  and  Addenda 

974A.    APPALACHIAN   TRAIL  CONFERENCE 

Guide  to  the  Appalachian  Trail  in  the  Southern  Appalachians.  Washington:  the 
Conference,  [I960].    (Its  publication  No.  8). 

975.  ARTMAN,  J.  O. 

Reforesting  the  Tennessee  Valley.  Garden  Journal.  (N.Y.  Botanical  Garden). 
10:182-85    1960. 

975A.    AYER,  P.  F. 

Along  came  Jones.  MLirW.  34:2.  33-35    1958. 
Brief  sketch  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Loyal  E.  Jones. 

976.  BARRETT,  GEORGE 

Study  in  desegregation.  New  York  Times  Magazine.  S  16,  1956  11-13  +  . 
Study  of  the  school  desegregation  crisis  in  Clinton,  Tennessee. 

977.  BILLINGS,  HENRY 

All  down  the  valley.  New  York:  Viking,  1952.  208p. 

A  popularly-written  account  of  the  Tennessee  Valley  and  the  impact  of  the  TVA. 

Includes  a  "case  study"  of  Clay  County,  North  Carolina. 

978.  BRAMER,  HENRY  C. 

The  economic  aspects  of  the  water  pollution  abatement  program  in  the  Ohio 
River  Valley.  Ph.D.  University  of  Pittsburgh.   1960. 

979.  BROWN,  HARLAN  R. 

In  the  foothills  of  the  Cumberland;  a  history  of  eastern  Kentucky.  Ashland; 
Graber,  1959.  113p. 

980.  BURNS,  JAMES  A. 

The  Crucible;  a  tale  of  the  Kentucky  feuds.  Oneida,  Kentucky,  1928.  125p. 
Autobiography  of  a  mountain  teacher  and  one  of  the  founders  of  the  Oneida 
Institute.  Signed  "Burns  of  the  Mountains." 

981.  CAMPBELL,  CARLOS  C. 

Birth  of  a  national  park  in  the  Great  Smoky  Mountains.  Knoxville:  University 
of  Tennessee  Press,   1960.   155p. 

A  history  of  the  Great  Smoky  Mountains  National  Park. 

982.  CAMPBELL,  JOHN  C. 

April  1928  issue  of  ML&W  devoted  largely  to  a  series  of  tributes  to  Campbell. 

983.  CHARTIER,  BARBARA 

Weaverton:  a  study  of  culture  and  personality  in  a  Southern  mill  town.  Thesis. 
University  of  North  Carolina.  1949. 

984.  CLAPP,  GORDON 

The  TVA;  an  approach  to  the  development  of  a  region.  Chicago:  University  of 
Chicago  Press,  1955.  206p. 

985.  CLARK,  BILLY  C. 

A  long  row  to  hoe.  New  York:  Crowell,  1960.  233p. 

Account  of  author's  boyhood  in  the  Catlettsburg,  Kentucky,  area.  Vivid  de- 
scription of  the  life  in  a  poverty-stricken  family.  Period  in  the  1930's  and  early 
1940's. 

986.  COATES,  HAROLD  W. 

Stories  of  Kentucky  feuds.  Knoxville:  Holmes-Darst  Coal  Corporation,  1923, 
1924,  1942.  280p. 

The  chapters  in  this  volume  appeared  earlier  as  a  series  of  booklets  issued  by 
the  Holmes-Darst  Coal  Corporation. 

85 


987.  COLLINS,  CARVEL  E. 

The  literary  tradition  of  the  Southern  mountaineer,  1824-1900  Ph.D.  University 
of  Chicago.  1944. 

988.  COLLINS,  CARVEL  E. 

Nineteenth   Century  fiction  of   the  Southern   Appalachians.   Bulletin   of  Biblio- 
graphy. 17:186-90,  215-17    1943. 

989.  CONNOR,  ROBERT  F. 

G.  C.  Ratliff,  "holler  scholar."  ML&W.  Fall   I960    13-17. 

990.  COPELAND,  LEWIS  C.  AND  OTHERS 

Estimating   Tennessee's    tourist    business.    University    of    Tennessee.    Bureau    of 
Business  Research.  Study  26,  1955.  119p. 

990A.    COWAN,  SAM  K. 

Sergeant  York  and  his  people.  New  York:  Funk  &  Wagnalls,  1922.  292p. 

991.  DAHIR,  JAMES 

Region   building;   community  development   lessons   from   the   Tennessee   Valley. 
New  York:  Harpers,  1955.  208p. 

Bibliography  ppl77-202. 

992.  DINGMAN,  HELEN   H. 

"AE"  of  the  mountains.  ML&W.  Summer  1960   22-26. 

A  tribute  to  Allen  Eaton. 

993.  DOBER,  VIRGINIA  D. 

An   analysis  of   the   social   life   and   customs   of   the   southern    Appalachians   as 
reflected  in  selected  children's  books.  Thesis.  University  of  North  Carolina.  1956. 

994.  DURAND,  LOYAL 

Mountain  moonshining  in  East  Tennessee.  Geographical  Revieiv  46:168-81   1956. 

A  discussion  of  the  economics  and  sociology  of  moonshining. 

995.  EDMUNDS,  ALLEN  T. 

Recreation   planning   in    the   Tennessee-Cumberland    Rivers    watersheds.    Social 
Forces   21:203-5    1942. 

996.  ELLISON,  JEROME 

The  plight  of  the  hill  people.  Saturday  Evening  Post.  Je  4,  1960   43. 

"The  stoiy  of  our  most  miserable  citizens." 

997.  ERNST,  HARRY  W.  AND  ANDREW  H.  CALLOWAY 

Reverse  integration.  New  York  Times  Magazine.  Ja  6,   1957    20. 

West  Virginia  State  College,  before  1954  an  all-Negro  institution,  has  over  one 
thousand  white  students. 

998.  FIELDS,  ANN 

Patron  saint  of  the  hills.  Coronet.  25  Ja  1949    156-60. 

Account  of  Linda  Neville  and  her  work  for  the  blind  in  the  hills  of  Kentucky. 

999.  FINK,  PAUL  M.  AND  MYRON  H.  AVERY 

The  nomenclature  of  the   Great   Smoky   Mountains.   East   Tennessee   Historical 
Society.  Publications.  9:53-64    1937. 

1000.  FOSTER,  FRANK  C. 

Mountain  work  of  the  Save   the   Children   Federation.    Journal   of   Educational 
Sociology.  17-238-45    1943. 

1001.  FURMAN,  LUCY 

Katherine  Pettit;  a  pioneer  mountain  worker.  MLfcW.  O  1936    16-20. 

1002.  GILMAN,  GLENN 

Human  relations  in   the  industrial  southeast;   a   study   of   the   textile   industry. 
Chapel  Hill:  University  of  North  Carolina  Press,  1956.  327p. 

"We  concern  ourselves  only  with  one  industry,  cotton  textiles,  in  one  particular 
area,  the  southeastern  Appalachian   Piedmont  region." 

86 


1003.  HALBERSTAM,  DAVID 

Town  that  became  everybody's  test  tube.  Reporter.  Ja  10,  1957  32-36. 

Study  of  the  school  desegregation  crisis  in  Clinton,  Tennessee. 

1004.  HARKNESS,  DAVID  J. 

Cumberland  Gap  in  literature.  Southern  Observer    3:107-15    1955. 

1004A.    HARRIS,  EVELYN  AND  FRANK  J.  KREBS 

From   humble  beginnings;  West  Virginia  State  Federation  of   Labor    1903-1957. 
Charleston,   1960.  553p. 

A   history  of  the  Federation.   Contains   much   information   on    labor   conditions 
in  the  coal  fields. 

1005.  HARRIS,  ISABELLA 

The  southern  mountaineer  in  American  fiction.  Ph.D.  Duke  University.   1948. 

1006.  HARRIS,  H. 

Two  famous  Kentucky  feuds  and  their  causes.  Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky. 
1940. 

1007.  HATFIELD,  LAWRENCE  D. 

The  true  story  of  the  Hatfield  and   McCoy   feud.   Charleston,   West    Virginia: 
Jarett,  1944.  47p. 

1008.  HENCH,  ATCHESON  L. 

Corbins  and  Nicolsons;  a  preliminary  report.  American  Speech.  13:77-79    1938. 

Problems  involved  in  recording  the  speech  of  residents  of  an  extremely  remote 
area  of  Madison  County,  Virginia. 

1009.  HENDERSON,  H.  A. 

Resources  and  incomes  of  rural  upper  East  Tennessee  people.  Tennessee  Agri- 
cultural Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  312.   I960.  30p. 

1009A.    HERRING,  HARRIET  L. 

Passing  of  the  mill  village.   Chapel   Hill:    University  of  North   Carolina    Press, 
1949.  137p. 

1010.  HERSH,  ALAN  M. 

The  development  of  the  iron  industry  in  East  Tennessee.    Thesis.  University  of 
Tennessee.  1958. 

1011.  HODGE,  CLARENCE  L. 

The  Tennessee  Valley  Authority;  a  national  experiment  in  regionalism.  Wash- 
ington: American  University  Press,  1938.  272p. 

1012.  HOFFMAN,  ALFRED 

The  mountaineer  in  industry.  ML&W.  Ja  1930   2-7. 

Reaction  of  East  Tennessee  mountaineers  to  work  in  the  rayon  and  cotton  mills. 

1013.  HOWARD,  O.  O. 

The  feuds  in  the  Cumberland  Mountains.  Independent.  56:783-88  1904. 
General  Howard  was  the  founder  of  Lincoln  Memorial  University. 

1014.  HUGHES,  THOMAS 

Rugby,    Tennessee;    being    some    account    of    the    settlement    founded    on    the 
Cumberland   Plateau   .   .   .   London:    Macmillan,    1881.    168p. 

1015.  JONES,  LOYAL 

Ever  your  friend,  Ray.  ML&W.  Winter  1960  16-18. 
Tribute  to  Dr.  Raymond  Drukker. 

1016.  JONES,  VIRGIL  C. 

The  Hatfields  and  the  McCoys.  Chapel  Hill:  University  of  North  Carolina  Press, 
1948.  293p. 

Generally  regarded  as  the  best  account  of  the  famous  feud. 

87 


1017.  KENNELL,  H.  RICHARD  AND  OTHERS 

Panel  on  problems  of  employment  and  retraining.  In:  United  States.  Congress. 
Senate.  Subcommittee  on  problems  of  the  aged  and  aging.  1960.  Part  5.  ppl095- 
1113. 

Discussion  of  the  problems  involved  in  retraining  older  workers— largely  un- 
employed coal  miners— for  other  occupations. 

1018.  KEYS,  WILLIAM   G. 

Editorial  attitudes  of  West  Virginia  newspapers  toward  school  and  education. 
Thesis.  West  Virginia  University.  1937. 

1019.  KINCAID,  ROBERT  L. 

Obituary  notice  and  tribute  to  Dr.  Kincaid.  ML&W.  Tall  1960   57-58. 

1020.  KRECHNIAK,  HELEN  B. 

The  Cumberlands  lose  a  friend.  ML&W.  Spring   1960    34-37. 
Obituary  of  and  tribute  to  Dr.  Mary  C.  Wharton. 

1020A.    LAMBERT,  DEAN  W. 

Mountain  funerals.  ML&W.  Spring  1961    43-50. 

Historical  account  of  funeral  customs  in   the  mountains. 

1021.  LAMBERT,  ROBERT  S. 

The  Oconaluftee  Valley,  1800-1860:  A  study  of  the  sources  for  mountain  history. 
North   Carolina  Historical  Revieiv.  35:415-26    1958. 

1022.  LAY,  ELERY 

Industrial  and  commercial  history  of  the  tri-cities  in  Tennessee.  Ed.D.  George 
Peabody.  1960. 

A  study  of  the  Bristol,  Johnson  City,  Kingsport  area. 

1023.  LEMERT,  BENJAMIN 

The  cotton  textile  industry  of  the  southern  Appalachian  Piedmont.  Chapel 
Hill:  University  of  North  Carolina  Press.  1933.  188p. 

1024.  LEWIS,  RUTH 

The  Southern  mountaineer  in  fiction.  Thesis.   University   of  Virginia.    1929. 

1025.  LIGHT  IN  THE  MOUNTAINS.  Time  O  16,  1950  74-75. 

Account  of  the  educational  and  religious  activities  of  Hiram  Erakes  in  the  Ken- 
tucky mountains. 

1026.  LILIENTHAL,  DAVID  E. 

TVA;  democracy  on  the  march.  20th  anniversary  edition.  New  York:  Harper, 
1953.  294p. 

1027.  LOCKARD,  E.  KIDD 

The  temperance  movement  in  West  Virginia.  Thesis.  West  Virginia  University. 
1937. 

1028.  LOOKABILL,  ROBERT  E. 

A  survey  of  withdrawals  from  Mullins  High  School  in  1954-1958.  Thesis.  West 
Virginia  University.  1960. 

Wyoming  County,  West  Virginia. 

1029.  MacCLINTOCK,  S.   C. 

Kentucky  mountains  and  their  feuds.  American  Journal  of  Sociology.  7:1-28. 
171-87    1901. 

1030.  McLEOD,  JOHN  A. 

Southern  highlands  in  prose  fiction.  Thesis.  University  of  North  Carolina.  1930. 

Bibliography  (ppl05-29)  lists  all  works  of  fiction  known  to  the  author  dealing 
with  Southern  Highlands. 

1031.  McCOMB,  THOMAS  M.  AND  MARTHA  DONALDSON 

Knoxville-Knox  County  consolidation  and  the  county  and  city  school  systems. 
Knoxville:   University  of  Tennessee.  Bureau  of  Business  Research.  1958.  69p. 

88 


1032.  McCOY,  HOMER   C. 

The  rise  of  education  and  the  decline  of  feudal  tendencies  in  the  Tug  River 
Valley  of  West  Virginia  and  Kentucky  in  relation  to  Hatfield  and  McCoy  feud. 
Thesis.  Marshall  College.   1950. 

1033.  MacDONALD,  LOIS 

Mountaineers  in  mill  villages.  ML&W.  Ja  1929    3-6. 

1034.  MacDONALD.  LOIS 

Southern  mill  hills.  New  York:  Hillman,  1928.  151p. 
Submitted  as  a  Ph.D.  dissertation  at  New  York  University. 

1035.  MAYER,  HENRY  C. 

Too  many  followers.  ML&W.  Fall  1960    8-12. 

Discussion  of  the  problems  of  training  leaders  for   the   Southern   Appalachian 

area. 

1036.  MILLER,  HELEN 

A  proposed  regional  library  for  Wood,  Pleasants,  Tyler,  and  Wetzel  Counties. 
Charleston:  W.  Va.  Library  Commission,   I960.  67p.  proc. 

1037.  MORLAND,  JOHN  KENNETH 

Educational  and  occupational  aspirations  of  mill  and  town  school  children  in 
a  southern  community.  Social  Forces  39:169-75    1960. 

A  follow-up  study  of  the  author's  "Midways  of  Kent." 

1038.  MORLAND,  JOHN  KENNETH 

Midways  of  Kent.  Chapel  Hill:  University  of  North  Carolina  Press,  1958.  291p. 
Case  study  of  a  mill  village  in  the  Piedmont. 

1039.  MYERS,  GRACE  F. 

Them  missionary  women;  or  work  in  the  southern  mountains.  Hillsdale, 
Michigan,  1911.  132p. 

1040.  PARK,  FOSTER 

The  early  literature  of  East  Tennessee.  East  Tennessee  Historical  Society. 
Publications.  28:23-45  1956. 

1040A.    PARRIS,  JOHN  A. 

My  mountains,  my  people.  Ashville:   Citizen-Times,  1957.  259p. 

A  sequal  to  "Roaming  the  Mountains."  Both  books  are  collections  of  sketches 
of  life  in  the  mountains  of  North  Carolina. 

1041.  PORTER,  J.  HARSHALL 

How  to  stave  off  the  wolf.  ML&W.  Fall  1960   32-33. 

Author  suggests  that  the  manufacture  of  barrel  staves  is  an  industry  suited  to 
many  mountain  areas. 

1042.  PORTER,  J.   MARSHALL 

Rustic  rail  fences  ...  a  windfall  from  deadwood.  ML&W.  Winter.  1960  39-41. 
Dead  chestnut  trees  can  be  turned  into  rail  fences,  thus  supplying  both  cash 
and  employment  to  many  areas. 

1043.  REGIONAL  LIBRARY  DEVELOPMENT  IN  WEST  VIRGINIA   1950-1960 
And  a  projected  plan  for  further  development  1961-1966.  Charleston:  West  Vir- 
ginia Library  Commission,  1960.  lOp.  proc. 

1044.  ROSS,  CHARLES  R. 

Blue  Ridge  Mountain  mayhem.  American  Forests.  50:118-20+     1944. 
Account  of  feuds  and  violence  in  the  mountains  of  northern  Georgia. 

1045.  SAALBACH,  WILLIAM  F. 

United  States  bituminous  coal  markets;  trends  since  1920  and  prospects  to  1975. 
Pittsburgh:    University  of  Pittsburgh  Press,   1960.  44p. 

89 


1046.  SELZNICK,  PHILIP 

TVA  and  the  grass  roots;  a  study  in  the  sociology  of  organization.  Berkeley: 
University  of  California  Press,  1949.  274p.  (University  of  California  Publications 
in  Culture  and  Society  v.3). 

1047.  SHACKELFORD,  NEVYLE 

Mountain  streams.  ML&W.  Winter   1960    14-15. 

Many  streams  are  little  more  than  "open  sewers,"  a  menace  alike  to  health  and 

the  tourist  industry. 

1048.  SIZER,  LEONARD  M.  AND  WARD  F.  PORTER 

The  relation  of  knowledge  to  adoption  of  recommended  practice.  West  Virginia 
Agricultural   Experiment  Station.  Bulletin  446,   1960.    12p. 

A  study  of  farm  operators  in  Pocahontas  County,  West  Virginia,  to  determine 
"the  relationship  of  knowledge  about  certain  farm  practices  to  other  socio- 
economic variables  and  the  relationship  of  these  variables  to  the  adoption  of 
recommended  practices." 

1049.  SIZER,  LEONARD  M. 

Problems  of  the  aged  in  rural  West  Virginia.  In:  United  States.  Congress.  Senate. 
Subcommittee  on  problems  of  the  aged  and  aging.  1960.  Part  5.  pp  1021 -32. 
Author  stresses  such  factors  as  social  isolation,  social  alienation  and  a  sense  of 
deprivation.    Part  Five  of  the  Committee's   report  deals  with   the   problems   of 
the  aged  in  West  Virginia. 

1050.  SIZER,  MIRIAM 

Christian  names  in  the  Blue  Ridge  of  Virginia.  American  Speech.  8:34-37    1933. 

1051.  SIZER,  MIRIAM 

Surnames  in  the  Blue  Ridge  of  Virginia.  American  Speech.  12:267-69    1937. 

1052.  SMITH,  RICHARD  C. 

Human  crisis  in  the  kingdom  of  coal.  New  York:  Friendship  Press,  1952.  H3p. 
Examines  the  plight  of  the  coal  miner  in  both  Europe  and  America.  Author 
was  for  some  years  Director  of  the  Mountaineer  Mining  Mission  in  Morgan- 
town,  West  Virginia. 

1053.  SPIVAK,  JOHN  L. 

The  devil's  brigade:  the  story  of  the  Hatfield-McCoy  feud.  New  York:  Bremer 
and  Warren,  1930.  325p. 

1053A.    SWIFT,  KATE 

Horseback   holiday.  American  Forests.   D    1957    14-16. 

"A  saddle  trip  in  the  Great  Smokies  is  an  ideal  vacation." 

1054.  TENNESSEE  VALLEY  AUTHORITY.  Division  of  Regional   Planning  Studies. 
Recreational  development  of  the  southern  highlands  region,  np,  1938.  61p.  proc. 

1055.  TENNESSEE   VALLEY   AUTHORITY.    Technical    Library 
A  bibliography  for  the  TVA  program.  Knoxville:    i960.  54p. 

1056.  TENNESSEE   VALLEY   AUTHORITY.   Technical   Library 

An  indexed  bibliography  of  the  Tennessee  Valley  Authority.  Knoxville:   1936-)-. 

Cumulative  supplements  are  issued  annually. 

1057.  THOMAS,  JEAN 

The  sun  shines  bright.  New  York:  Prentice-Hall,  1940.  275p. 

An  autobiography  of  "the  traipsin  woman."  Includes  many  anecdoies  of  moun- 
tain life  in  eastern  Kentucky. 

1058.  THOMAS,  JEAN 

The  traipsin'  woman.  New  York,  Dutton,   1933.  277p. 

A  series  of  sketches  and  stories  of  life  in  the  eastern  Kentucky  mountain  country. 

1059.  THOMAS,  WILLIAM  R. 

Life  among  the  hills  and  mountains  of  Kentucky.  Louisville:  Standard  Priming, 
1926.  414p. 

90 


1060.  THOMPSON,  SAMUEL  H. 

The  highlanders  of  the  South.  New  York:  Eaton  &  Mains,  1910.  86p. 
Deals  largely  with  East  Tennessee. 

1061.  TORREY,  BRADFORD 

World  of  green  hills;   observations   of  nature  and   human   nature   in   the   Blue 
Ridge.  New  York:   1898.  285p. 

An  account  of  a  naturalist's   travels   in   the  mountain   country   of  Virginia  and 
North   Carolina. 

1001  A.    ULMER,  MARY 

Mountain  worker.  ML&W  Winter  1953  20-21. 
A  sketch  of  the  Rev.  Rufus  Morgan. 

1062.  VAUGHN,  MARSHALL  E. 

ML&W— its  purpose  and  scope.  ML&W  Spring  1960  17-20. 

1063.  WALTERS,  R.  N. 

A   survey   and   sociological   study   of   twenty-five  weekly   newspapers    in   eastern 
Kentucky.  Thesis.  University  of  Kentucky.   1936. 

1064.  WATKINS,  F.  C. 

Thomas  Wolfe  and  the  southern  mountaineers.  South  Atlantic  Quarterly  50:58-71 
1951. 

1065.  WENGERT,  NORMAN  I. 

Valley  of  tomorrow;  the  TVA  and  agriculture.  Knoxville:   University  of  Tennes- 
see, 1952.  151p.   (University  of  Tennessee  Record.  Extension  Series  28:1) 

1066.  WHISMAN,  JOHN  D. 

A  new  commission  tackles  an  old  problem.  ML&W  Fall  1959  18-19. 

Discusses   the  newly-formed   Eastern   Kentucky  Regional   Planning   Commission. 

1067.  WOODS,  ROY  C. 

Effects  of  conflicting  patterns  of  thinking.  Educational  Forum  22:447-52  1958. 
Study  of  the  Hatfield-McCoy  feud  as  an  example  of  what  may  happen  "when 
a   pattern   of  socially  accepted   thinking   encounters   an   equally   accepted   anti- 
social pattern." 

1068.  WOODS,  ROY  C. 

History  of   the   Hatfield-McCoy   feud   with   special    attention    to    the    effects   of 
education  on  it.   West    Virginia  History  22:27-32   1960. 

1069.  WOOTTON,   CLARA 

They  have  topped  the  mountains.  Frankfort:  Blue  Grass  Press,  1960.  159p. 
"The  story  of  a  circuit  riding  lawyer  of  the  Kentucky  Mountains."  The  lawyer 
was  Bailey  P.  Wootton,  an  important  figure  in  Kentucky  politics. 


91 


SUBJECT  &  AUTHOR  INDEX 

(Numbers  refer  to  items) 


Acuff,  J.  T.  545 

Adams,  William  H.  60 

Addington,  Violet  W.  676 

Adoption    206 

Adult  education   734,   735.   741,   767,   771, 

775,  1017 
Aged  94,  1017.  1049 
Agricultural  education  805,  812,  794A 
Agriculture  785-854,    1048 
Ahrenholz,   Gladys   382 
Akers,  Carmen  E.  228 
Akers,  Elmer  264 
Alabama    102,    239.    492.    498,    505.    517, 

597,  599,  602,  603,  607,  610,  612,  614, 

694,  727,  759,  811,  959 
Alabama  Educational  Survey  Commission 

517 
Alexander,  E.  H.  637 
Alexander,  Frank  D.  61 
Alexander  County,  North  Carolina  534 
Alleghany  County,  Virginia  161 
Allen,  Roscoe  J.  559 
Allred,  Charles  E.  62,  423,  785 
Almon,  Clopper  63,  786 
Alpine  Recreation  Association  469 
Ambrose,   L.   M.   691 
Ambrose,  Luther   787 
American  Civil  Liberties  Union  356 
American    Constitutional   Association    383 
American  Friends  Service  Committee  403 
American  Inland  Mission  461 
Anderson,  Francis  G.   182 
Anderson,  Paul  F.  560 
Anderson   County,  Tennessee  368,  755 
Anglin,   Frances   B.   730 
Appalachian   Trail  974 A 
Apples  804 

Aptitude  See  Intelligence  &  Aptitude 
Archer,  Cordelia  561 
Armentrout,  Walter  W.  1,  788 
Armstrong,   Anne  W.   1A 
Arnold,  Dorthy  A.  963 
Amy,  Malcolm   354 
Aronoff,  Jacob   377 
Vrthurdale,   W.    Va.    72.   677 
Artman,  J.  O.  975 
Arts  &  Crafts  663,  963-975 
Ashe  County,  North  Carolina  577 
Asher,  E.  J.  218 
Ashville,  North  Carolina  438 
Ashville  Farm  School  669 
Astronomy   150 
Atkins,  Enos  E.  729 
Atkins,  Samuel  789 
Augusta  County,  Virginia  76,  106,  828 
Avery,   Myron    H.   999 


Avery   County,   North   Carolina    101,    134, 

298,  595 
Ayer,    P.    F.   975A 

B 

Backman,  Jules  411 

Bacon,  H.  S.  229 

Bailey,  Carol  424 

Bailey,  Charlotte  P.  731 

Bailey,  E.  B.  481 

Bailey,   Edgar  W.   562 

Bailey,  John   H.   790 

Ball,  Bonnie  482 

Ball,  Richard  A.  384 

Ballads  See  Folklore;   music 

Balsam  Grove,  North  Carolina  143 

Bannerman,  Arthur  M.   169 

Baptists  464,  474,  475,  477,  626 

Barb,  John  M.  357 

Barbour  County,  West  Virginia  213,  497, 

891 
Barker,  Toramie  D.  710,  711 
Barkley,  Anna  M.  732 
Barnard,  E.  F.  230 
Barnes,  Clarence  E.  385 
Barrels,  1028 
Barrett,  George  976 
Barry,  Helen  B.  733 
Basso,   Hamilton  633 
Bath  County,  Virginia  829 
Bander,  Ward  W.  65,  183 
Beach,  Robert  F.  712 
Beale,  Calvin  L.  483 
Bedford  County,  Virginia  60,  611,  826 
Beebe,  Gilbert  W.  231,  232,  342 
Beech  Creek,  Kentucky  189,   192 
Beers,  Howard  W.  2,  3,  66,  265,  266,  277, 

287,  288,  289,  294,  324,  328 
Belcher,  John  C.  233 
Bell  County,  Kentucky  173,  348 
Bendall,  John  W.  425 
Bennett,  Clemmon  A.  563 
Bennett,  H.  D.  855 
Benschoten,  J.  A.  734 
Benton,  Robert  L.  518 
Berea  College  249,  628-632 
Berea   College.   Department   of   Education 

519,  520 
Berry,  Lester  V.  950 
Berry   Schools   633-636 
Beshears,  Ralph  L.   184 
Beynon,  Erdmann  267 
Bibb    County,    Alabama    610 
Bidstrup,   George  616 
Big  Sandy  River  48,  330 
Billings,  Henry  977 
Bing,  William  K.  80 
Bird,  E.  T.  799 


92 


Birth  control  231,  232.  241 

Birth  rate  See  Population 

Blacksburg,  Virginia  92 

Blair,  Reuben  M.  564 

Bland,  Marion  F.  234 

Bland  County,  Virginia   107 

Bliss,  Russell  L.  185 

Blizzard,  William  C.  358 

Blount  County,  Alabama  607 

Blount  County,  Tennessee  745A,  749 

Blue  Ridge   Mountains  41,   49.   219,   224. 

247,  1050,  1051 
Bonar,  Ross  692 
Bond,  Sirus  O.  649 
Bondurant,  J.  H.  791,  821 
Bonser,  Howard  J.  67,  68.  69,  792,  793 
Bookmobiles  712A  See  also  Libraries 
Boone,  North  Carolina  964 
Boone    County,    West   Virginia    164,    738, 

772 
Borah,  Leo  A.  70 
Boshears,  Frances  875,  876 
Bosworth,  Karl  A.  170 
Botetourt  County,  Virginia  79,  830 
Bott,  Matthias  426 
Bowman,  Elizabeth  S.  4 
Bowman,  Owen  521 
Boyd,  V.  A.  186 
Boyd  County,  Kentucky  95,  578 
Bradley,  Frances  S.  235 
Bradley  County,  Tennessee  472,  537,  609, 

745 
Brailler,  Floyd  650 
Bramer,  Hen ry  C.  978 
Brasington,  Clayton  F.  794 
Bray,  Rose  A.  951 
Breakdowns    (dance)  949 
Breathitt  County,  Kentucky  168,  171,  531, 

587,  747,  821,  861 
Breazeale,  Norma  290 
Breckenridge,  Desha  359 
Breckinridge,   Mary   235A 
Breeding,  Clarence  H.  794A 
Biender,  Ernest  V.  71 
Bright,  Mildred  187 
Bristol,  Tennessee  509,  533,  685,  1022 
Britt,  Roy  T.   856 
Brooks,  William  E.  72 
Brosky,  A.  F.  386 
Brown,  Barbara   188 
Brown,  Harlan  R.  979 
Brown,  James  S.  73,  189-192,  291  292.  293, 

294 
Brown,  Kenneth  713 
Brownlee,  Frederick  644 
Brucker,   Elizabeth   693 
Bruere,  Martha  436 
Bruere,  Robert  436 
Brunk,  Harry  A.  437 
Brush,  Frederick  877 
Brunner,  Edmund  735 
Bryan,  Charles  F.  916,  917 
Bryant,  William  A.  74 


Buchanan,  John  A.  412 

Buchanan,  Margaret  T.  268 

Buchanan   County,   Virginia    108,  750 

Bullen,  Robert  W.  714 

Buncombe  County,  North  Carolina  741 

Bureau  o£  Cooperatiye  Medicine  343 

Burman,  Ben  L.  75 

Burns,  James  A.  980 

Butt,   Herbert   69 

B\ar,  Thomas  M.  735A 

Byars,  J.  C.  360 


Cabin  Creek,  West  Virginia  364 

Caldwell,  Mary  F.  5 

Caldwell,  Morris  G.  269 

Calhoun   County,   West    Virginia    778 

Callahan,  North  6 

Calloway,  Andrew  H.  997 

Cambriaire  C.  P.  918 

Campbell,  Carlos  G.  981 

Campbell,   John   C.   7,   617,   982   See   also 

John  C.  Campbell  Folk  School 
Campbell,  Marie  878,  879,  880.  919 
Campbell,  Olive  618,  645,  646,  647,  920 
Campbell,  Robert  F.  438 
Campbell   County,  Tennessee  348,  588 
Caney  Junior  College  655 
Cansler,  Charles  W.  484 
Carder,  Roscoe  H.  565 
Carney,   Mabel  736 
Carothers,  J.  E.  795 
Carpenter,  Charles  952 
Carritt,  G.  361 

Carroll  County,  Virginia   109.  521   831 
Carson-Newman  Coilege  522 
Carter,  R.  G.  597 
Carter  County,  Kentucky  586 

Carter   County,   Tennessee    159.   532.   679, 
688,  744 

Caruthers,  Eugene  598 

Cassell,  Charles  W.  439 

Catlett,  Clay  76 

Catlettsburg,  Kentucky  985 

Cattle  808,  848  See  also  Liyestock  industry 

and  trade 
Cessana,  Ralph  W.  651 
Chalmers,  F.  W.  236 
Chapman,  Mary  L.  330 
Charleston,  West  Virginia   182 
Chartier,  Barbara  983 
Chase,  Lewis  I.  77 
Chemical  Industry  132,  323 
Cherokee  County,  Alabama   614 

Cherokee    County,    North    Carolina     169, 
512  540,  686 

Cherokee  Indians  487,  488,  490,  490A.  963 
Chicago  273,  275,  280,  281,  284.  286 
Childers,  James  S.  634 


93 


Children  &  Youth  182,  185,  187,  193,  195, 
196,  197,  200,  204,  205,  208,  210,  211, 
212,  213,  214,  216,  234,  258,  260,  347, 
391,  395,  398,  469,  471,  769  See  also 
Education;  families;  juvenile  delin- 
quency 

Children's  literature  993 

Christian  Church  477 

Christiansen,  John   R.    78,   237,  393,   797 

Christmas  customs  915 

Churches   See   Religion;   individual   de- 
nominations 

Cincinnati  270,  271,  274,  282,  450 

City  government  See  Local  government 

Clairborne  County,  Tennessee  348,  523, 
731,  794 A 

Clapp,  Elsie  R.  677 

Clapp,  Gordon  984 

Clark,  Billy  O.  985 

Clark,  Elmer  T.  440 

Clark,  H.  T.  653 

Clark,  Septima  638 

Clarke  County,  Georgia   177 

Clarke  County,  Virginia  162,  832 

Clay  County,  Kentucky  173,  407 

Clay  County,  North  Carolina  977 

Clay  County,  West  Virginia  757 

Clayton,  C.  F.  796 

Cleveland  County,  North  Carolina  600, 
608 

Clevinger,  Woodrow  R.  295 

Clinton,  Tennessee  751,  976,  1003 

Clopper,  Edward  N.   193 

Clothing  Industry  132 

Coal  Mines  &  Miners  329-434,  894,  896, 
960,  1004A,  1017,  1045,  1052 

Coates,  Harold  W.  986 

Cobb,  Anne  662,  881 

Cobb,  Donald  566 

Cobb,  Irene  S.  500A 

Coger,  William  N.  694 

Cohen,  Irwin  B.  79 

Coke  County,  Tennessee  557,  579,  613, 
800,  923 

Coleman,  M.  362 

Coleman,  Wilma  953 

Colleges  &  universities  735A  See  also 
Names  of  individual   institutions 

Collins,  Carvel  E.  987,  988 

Collins,  Ernest  171 

Collins,  William  271 

Combs,  Jerry  W.  296 

Combs,  Josiah  H.  8,  882,  921,  954 

Cometti,  Elizabeth  485 

Commonwealth  College  661 

Comstock,  Henry  B.  964 

Conference  of  Southern  Mountain  Work- 
ers 9 

Conley,  Phil  331 

Conner,  Maynard  C.  80 

Conner,  Robert  F.  989 

Conservation  790,  863  See  also  Reforesta- 
tion 


Cook,  John  H.  737 

Cook,  Nash  738 

Cook,  Ruth  E.  238 

Cooke,   Kennis   568 

Coolidge,  Ruth  648 

Cooper,  H.  S.  486 

Cooper,  John  R.  501 

Cooperative  associations  815,  819,  965 

Cope,  Annis  D.  569 

Copeland,  Lewis  C.  990 

Corn  811 

Cornell,  F.  D.  81 

Cornett,  Elizabeth  B.  883 

Cotton  811 

Couch,  W.  T.   10 

Coughenour,  C.  M.  797 

Council  of  the  Southern  Mountains  2,  11 

Counties,  statistics  25 

County  government  See  Local  govern- 
ment 

Cowan,  Sam  K.  990A 

Cowley,   Malcolm  363 

Craddock,  Ernest  B.  695 

Crafts  See  Arts  &  crafts 

Craghead,  Paul  546 

Craig,  Edward  M.  441 

Craig,   Ronald   B.   857 

Craig  County,  Virginia  110 

Crawford,  Bruce  387 

Crawford,  Charles  B.   364 

Credle,  Ellis  884 

Cressey,  Paul  F.  388 

Crick,  Herbert  W.  567 

Crime  75,  85,  410  See  also  Juvenile  delin- 
quency 

Crura,  West  Virginia  524,  769 

Cullman  County,  Alabama   592,  498,   607 

Culpeper  County,  Virginia  833 

Cumberland  County,  Tennessee  36,  68, 
163,  785,  856 

Cumberland  Gap  70,  1004 

Cunningham,  Addie  J.  239 

Customs    See    Folklore 

Cyr,  Frank  W.  739 


D 


Dahir,  James  991 
Dairy  industry   844 
Dances  889,  905,  949 
Daniels,  Freeman  J.  12 
Danley,  Robert  A.  297 
Darnell,  Harold  L.  740 
Dating   185 
Davidson,  Donald  13 
Davidson,  Dwight  M.  82 
Davidson,  Perry  442 
Davis,  Arthur  K.  922 
Davis,  D.  H.  14,  272 
Davis,  Haze  A.  523 
Davis,  Hester  A.  487 
Davison,  Zeta,  C.  955 
Dawson,   George  W.  524 
Day,  D.  L.   194 


94 


Day,  Delia  741 

Day,  John  F.  15 

Decentralization  24 

Deep  Water  School  765 

Dekalh  County,  Alabama  607 

Delozier,  Robert  C.  741 A 

Deschamps,   Alfred   J.   798 

Desegregation    See   Schools,    desegregation 

Detroit  264 

Diabetes  261 

Dialects  See  Speech 

Dickenson  County,  Virginia  111,  906 

Diehl,  James  A.  678 

Diet  See  Nutrition 

Dillow,  Nola  M.  697 

Dingman,  Helen  H.  992 

Disciples  of  Christ  445 

Dixon,   Hertha  599 

Dober,  Virginia  D.  993 

Dodson,  L.  S.  134,  298 

Donaldson,   Martha   1031 

Doolittle,  Warren  T.  858 

Doran,  Paul  E.  443 

Dorner,  P.  814 

Dorris,  Jonathan  T.  654 

Dotson,  John  A.  389 

Douglas,  Harlan  P.  444 

Douglas  Reservoir  133 

Drake,  Charles  218A,  332 

Draper,  Warren  F.  344 

Dreiser,  Theodore  374 

Drop  outs  See  School  attendance 

Drukker,   Raymond   1015 

Duerr,  William  A.  859,  860,  861,  862 

Duff,  Frank  427 

Dulaney,  Ben  B.  83 

Dulcimers  916,  917,  928,  936,  943,  945 

Dunlap,  A.  R.  487A 

Duncan,  Hannibal   15A 

Dunn,  Fannie  W.  619 

Durand,  Lloyd  799,  994 

Durr,  William  859,  860,  861,  862 

Durrett,  Harold  L.  428 

Dutton,  William  S.  655 

Dykeman,  Wilma  16 

Dykes,  Archie  R.  525,  547 


East  Tennessee  Educational  Association 
594 

East  Tennessee  University  656 

Eastern  Kentucky  Regional  Planning 
Commission    1066 

Eastern  Kentucky  State  College  654 

Eaton,  Allen  H.  967,  968,  992 

Ebert,  Charles  H.  84 

Economic  conditions  51,  60,  76,  77,  79- 
83,  88,  93,  94,  95,  97,  98,  102,  105, 
127,  138,  142,  145,  146,  147,  153,  154, 
161,  162,  167  See  also  Coal;  employ- 
ment;   income;    individual   industries. 

Eddy,  Donald  85 

Edmunds,  Allen  T.  995 


Education  22,  103,  216,  389,  424,  447,  449, 
501-784,  1028,  1031,  1037  See  also 
Children  &  youth 

Educational  guidance  See  Guidance 

Edwards,  A.  S.  17 

Edwards,  Allen  D.  93 

Edwards,  Dorothy  716 

Edwards,  Evelyn  L.  717 

Edwards,  J.  H.  390 

Electrification   793 

Elizabethton,  Tennessee  210 

Elk  Garden,  West  Virginia   146 

Elkins,  John  E.  570 

Elliott  County,  Kentucky  216 

Ellis,  Mabel  B.  391 

Ellison,  Jerome  996 

Ehod,  Henry  J.  571 

Emmet,  Boris  365 

Employment  1,  50,  64,  86A,  90,  91,  100. 
136,  137,  164,  412,  791,  1017 

Enslow,  Ella  526 

Ernst,  Harry  W.  332,  884A,  997 

Erosion  800 

Estabrook,  Arthur  H.  18,  86 

Evans,  Homer  C.  799A 

Evans,   Irvin  C.   679 

Evernden,  William  L.  698 


Fairmont,    West   Virginia    365 

Families  and  Family  life  183,  186,  188. 
189,  190,  191,  192,  198,  199,  201-205, 
207,  208,  209,  215,  217,  328,  393,  395, 
510 

Farm  tenure  813 

Farmers  Federation  815 

Farr,  T.  J.   195,  885,  956 

Fauquier  County,  Virginia  593 

Fayette   County,   West   Virginia   714,    788 

Feaster,  Eston  K.  See  West  Virginia.  Legis- 
lative Interim   Committee 

Fenton,  John  H.  172 

Feuds  980,  986,  1006,  1013,  1032,  1011 
See  also  Hatfield-McCoy  feud 

Fiction  See  Literature 

Field,  Lewis  345 

Fields,  Ann  998 

Fink,  Paul  M.  999 

Finney,  Raymond  620 

Fisher,  Waldo,  E.  413 

Fishman,  Leo  86A 

Floods  128 

Floyd  County,  Georgia   103,  502 

Floyd  County,  Kentucky  501,  572.  897 

Floyd  County,  Virginia  112 

Fogg,  Gordon  145 

Folk  arts-teaching  of  884A 

Folk  medicine  247,  249A 

Folk  schools  616-675 

"Folk  society"   3 

Folklore  431,  872-915 

Follow-up  studies  730,  764 

Folmsbee,  Stanley  J.  656 


95 


Ford,  Howard  G.  969 

Ford,  Thomas  R.  237 

Foreman,  Kenneth  J.  444A 

Forestry  and  forest  products  841,  855-871, 
975,  1041,  1042,  1054,  See  also  Furni- 
ture industry,  woodworking  industry 

Forster,  G.  W.  818 

Fortune,  Alonzo  445 

Foscuc,  E.  J.  87 

Foster,  Clementine  600 

Foster,  Frank  C.   1000 

Four-H  Clubs  213 

Fox,  John  Jr.  18A 

Fiakes,  Hiram   1025 

Frank,  Bernard  800 

Franklin  County,  Tennessee  147.  259, 
493,  536,  576,  620,  801A 

Frazier,   Ghalmer  572 

Frederick  County,  Maryland  96 

Frederick  County,  Virginia  145 

Freedman,  Ronald  273 

French,  Jack  392 

French  Broad  River  16 

French  Creek,  West  Virginia  131 

Friedl,  Joseph  J.  573 

Friedman,  John  R.  88 

Frisch,   Isadore   333 

Frontier  Nursing  Service  235 A,  240,  250, 
263 

Frost,  Norman  527 

Frost,  William  G.  628 

Frye,  Paul  D.  548 

Fuller,  Hugh  E.  657 

Fuller,  R.  V.  601 

Fulton,   M.   K.   829,   831,   834,   838,   839 

Funeral  customs   1020A 

Furman,  Lucy  658,  1001 

Furniture  industry  84 


Gabbard,  Eugene  574 

Galilean  Children's  Home  675 

Galloway,  Robert  E.  61,  89,  90,  91,  801 

Gardner,  Annie  C.  488 

Gardner,  Carolina  240 

Garland,  M.  P.  549 

Garner    A.  L.  299 

Garnett,  William  E.  92,  93,  196,  446 

Gaston  County,  North  Carolina  473 

Gatlinburg,  Tennessee  87 

Gault,  Thomas  G.  801A 

Gaumnitz,  Walter  H.  528,  742 

Gearreald,  T.  N.   819 

Geisler,  Adalene  94 

Geisler,  M.  A.  232 

Georgia  17,  61,  71,  89,  103,  177,  198,  222, 
233,  301,  502,  513,  563,  606,  633-636, 
666,  667,  671,  721,  810,  953,  973,  1044 

Germans  486,  492,  493,  499 

Gibbs,  James  E.  529 

Gibson,  Ernest  Willis  95 

Gibson,  Vivian  502 

Gibson,  W.  L.  802 


Giffin,  Roscoe  19,  270,  274,  275 

Gilbert,  William   H.  489 

Giles  County,  Virginia  113 

Gilliam,  Lena  241 

Gilman,  Glenn  1002 

Gilmer  County,  West  Virginia  892 

Giuhan,  Mercer  A.  602 

Gladden,   James  W.    393 

Glass,  Daniel  603 

Glasscock,  H.  886 

Glendinning,  R.  M.  803 

Glenn,  Alfonso  530 

Goats,  787 

Goff,  Kenneth  J.  503 

Golden,   Charles    E.   504 

Gooch,  Ernest   D.  803 A 

Gooch,  Wilbur  531 

Goodrich,  Frances  L.  970 

Gordon  Countv,  Georgia  177,  563 

Gore,  Nina  L.  743 

Grainger    County,    Tennessee    514A,    545, 

803 
Grant,  John   L.   490 
Gratton,  C.  Hartley  20 
Gray,  L.  C.  21 

Gray,  Wayne  T.  22,  300.  699 
Graybeal,  David  M.  22A 
Grayson  County,  Virginia  114,  834,  849 
Great  Smokv  Mountains  30,  41,  49A,  957, 

999,  105  3  A 
Great    Smoky    Mountains    National    Park 

981 
Greenbrier    County,    West    Virginia    690, 

853 
Greene  County,  Tennessee  208,  548,  684, 

806,   824 
Greene  County,  Virginia  835 
Greenslade,  Rush  V.  414 
Greenville,  Tennessee   105 
Greenville    County,    South    Carolina    97, 

554,  708,  733,  735 
Gregory,  Madeline  T.  532 
Griffin,  Gerald  334 
Griffith,  Henrietta  447 
Grigsby,  S.  E.  96 
Grindstaff,  Dana  R.  744 
Grisso,  Robert  D.  804 
Grossman,  D.  A.  22B 
Gruetli,  Tennessee  491 
Grundy  County,   Tennessee   36,   423,   495, 

542 
Guerrant,  Edward  O.  448,  460 
Guidance    187,    322,    408,    424,    425,    428, 

531,    668,    689,    744,    747,    748,    759A, 

780A 
Guineas  489,  497 
Gulick,  John  490A 
Gullick,  Guy  A.  97 
Gustafson,  R.  O.  861 


H 


Hackamack,  L.  306 
Hahn,  W.  P.  197 


96 


Habersham  County,  Georgia  233 
Halberstam,  David   1003 
Hale,  Nathan  S.  242 
Hale,  Wade  H.  449 
Haley,  Elliott  G.  98 
Hall,  Joseph  S.  887,  957 
Halpert,  Herbert  888 
Ham,  Tom  198 
Hamilton  C.  H.  199,  243,  245 
Hamilton,  Michael  450 
Hamilton  County,  Tennessee  211,  715 
Hancock,  Harry  L.  745 
Hancock  County,  Tennessee  551,  782 
Hanczarvk,   Edwin  W.    100 
Handicrafts  See  Arts  &   Crafts 
Haney,  William  H.  23 
Hanna,  Edwin  B.  99 
Hanna,  Margaret   301 
Hardin,  Rector  R.  24 
Hardin   County,  Tennessee  856 
Hargrove,  Jack   B.  505 
Harkness,  David  J.  1004 
Harlan    County,    Kentucky    85,    187,    374, 
377,  378,  388,  394,  408,  511,  535,  581, 
668,  689 
Harless,  N.  R.  745A 
Harlow,  Alvin  746 
Harold,  K.  E.  506 
Harrill,  Bob  E.  507 
Harris,  A.  J.  832,  833 
Harris,  Evelyn   1004 A 
Harris,  George  E.  302 
Harris,  Isabella   1005 
Harris,  Jesse  W.  957A 
Harris,  M.  1006 

Harrison  Countv,  West  Virginia  649,  893 
Hait,  John  F.  311 
Hartman,  Vladimir  E.  101 
Harvey,  K.  F.  244 
Hatcher,  O.  Latham  660,  747,  748 
Hatfield,  Lawrence  D.   1007 
Hatfield-McCoy    feud     1016,     1032,     1053, 

1067,  1068 
Haun,  Mildred  E.  923 
Hawkins  County,  Tennessee  508,  525,  569, 

759A,  768 
Hawley,  Marion  H.   102 
Hay,  Donald  233,  245 
Haywood,  Charles  872 
Haywood    County,    North    Carolina     134, 

245,  298 
Hazel  Green  Academy  672A 
Headrick,  Warren  B.  749 
Health     22,    58,     228-263,     342-355.     756, 
758,  759  See  also  Mental  health;  folk 
medicine 
Health  education  770 
Health  insurance  233,  245 
Heath,  Emily  P.   103 
Heberle,  Rudolf  303 
Heflin,  Catherine  66,  265,  266,  276,  277 
Hench,  Atcheson  L.  1008 
Henderson,  H.  A.   1009 


Henderson,  Helen  R.  750 
Henderson    County,    North    Carolina    720 
Henry.  Mellinger  E.  924,  925 
Henry,  Thomas  R.  45 
Herndon,  C.  N.  219 
Herring,  Harriet  L.  1009 A 
Hersh,  Alan    M.    1010 
Hickey,  Margaret  200 
High  Point,  North  Carolina  84 
Highlander  Folk  School  637-643 
Hilbish,  Florence  451 
Hill,  James  E.  804A 
Hill,  Raymond  T.    104 
Hillbilly  music  926 
Hindman  Settlement   School   658,  662 
Hinebaugh,  Margaret  H.  575 
Hines,  James  201 
Hinton,   Bruce   805 
Hirsch,  Nathaniel  220,  221 
Hitch,  Margaret  A.  202 
Hitt,  Homer  L.  304,  305 
Hodge,  Clarence  L.   1011 
Hodges,  Sidney  C.  971 
Hoffman,  Betty  394 
Hoffmann,  Alfred  1012 
Hoffsommer,  Harold  96 
Holden,  Anna  751 

Holiness  churches  440,  452  See  also  Pente- 
costal churches 

Holland,  Carl  W.  533^ 

Hollandsworth,  G.  395 

Hollev,  Marie  E.  604 

Holly',  J.  Fred   105 

Holt,  John  B.  452 

Home  economics  67,  783 

Hooker,  Elizabeth   R.   453,   454 

Horton,   Myles  638 

Hospitals  See  Health 

Howard,  Mont  ice  B.  718 

Howard,  O.  O.   1013 

Hudson,  G.   Donald    106 

Hughes,  Frank  G.  732 

Hughes,  R.  B.   806 

Hughes,  Thomas  1014 

Hughson,  Walter  455 

Human,  William  D.  550 

Humbert,  R.   L.    107-125 

Humble,  Marion  719 

Hummel,  R.  L.  82 

Hundley,  John  R.  278 

Hunter,  Catherine  H.  576 

Hurst,  Otis  C.  753 

Hurst,  Thomas  E.  415 

Hurt,  A.  B.  577 

Hutchison,  Robert  S.  305A 

Hutson,  Andrew  C.  367,  368 

Hyland,  Thomas  S.  203 


Illinois  957A 

Illiteracy   775    See   also   Adult   education; 

moonlight  schools 
Immunization  229 


97 


Income   102.   120,   130,   140,  789,  820,  821, 

823,   1000 
Indianapolis  285,  322 
Indians   483    See    also    Cherokee    Indians; 

Malungeons 
Industries    and    Industrialization    24,    63, 

74,  107-125,  129,  132,  141,  141A,  156, 

157,    159,    160,    165,    305A,    307,    786, 

822,  842,  1012 
Ingram,   Henry  R.  507A 
Ingram,   Milton  J.   605 
Innes,  Thomas  C.  754 
Integration   See    Schools,    desegregation 
Intelligence  and  aptitude  218-227 
Iron  industry   1010 
Irwin,  Frank  E.  755 
Isaack,  Thomas  S.   156 

J 
Jackson,  George  P.  927 
Jackson,  Helen  F.  491 
Jackson,  Minnie  L.  606 
Jackson,  Ward  B.  578 
Jackson   County,    Kentucky   565,    719 
Jackson  County,  West  Virginia  851 
Jarvis,  James  A.  173 
Jasper,  Mary  K.  621 
Jefferson  Countv,  Alabama  602,  612,  694, 

727,  759 
Jefferson  County,  Kentucky  677 
Jefferson  Countv,  Tennessee  311,  522,  583 
Jeffreys,  A.  W.  928 
Jenkins,  Kentucky   386 
Jensen,  Harald  R.  807 
Jesse,  R.  W.  229 
Jillison,   Willard   R.   335 
John  G.  Campbell  Folk  School  644-648 
Johnson,  Charles  S.  25 
Johruson,  Jack  D.  808 
Johnson,  John  L.  126 
Johnson,   Joseph   M.   804 
Johnson,  Paul  M.  755A 
Johnson,  Rayburn  306 
Johnson,  Roy  L.  508 
Johnson,  Victor  M.  509 
Johnson    City,    Tennessee    210,    706,    758, 

760,  781,'  1022 
Johnson  Countv,  Kentucky  289,  318,  324, 

328 
Johnson  County,  Tennessee  549,  561 
Jones,  Abraham  607 
Jones,   Leslie    17,  222 
Jones,   Loyal   975A,   1015 
Jones,    Oleona   26 
Jones,  Virgil  C.  1016 
Jones,  William  756 
Journalism  See  Newspapers 
Justice,  Dewey  J.  246 
Juvenile  delinquency   184,   194,  203A.  469 

See  also  Crime 

K 

Kanawha   Welfare  Council  203A 


Kane,  Harnett  T.  635 

Kaufman,  Harold  F.  456,  457 

Kay,  Cora  B.  224 

Keebler,  Alleen  S.  701 

Keller,  Franklin  J.  531 

Keller,  Luther   807 

Kelly,  L.  C.  458 

Kennedy,  Ralph  E.   127 

Kennell,  H.  R.   1017 

Kent,  George  659 

Kentron,  J.  657 

Kentucky  3,  8,  14,  15,  19,  23,  31,  43,  58, 
65,  66,  73,  78,  85,  90,  91,  95,  99,  126, 
128,  134,  138,  140,  144,  149,  166,  168, 
171,  173,  173A,  175,  183,  185,  186,  187, 
189-193,  201,  203,  207,  209,  215,  216, 
218,  220,  221,  228,  30,  237,  240,  246, 
248,  249A,  251,  262,  265,  266,  269,  272, 
287-290,  293,  294,  297,  298,  300,  302, 
310,  314,  317,  318,  319,  324,  325, 
328,  333,  334,  335,  336,  337,  338, 
339,  340,  348,  354,  356,  359,  360,  361, 
363,  370,  371,  371,  374,  375,  377,  378, 
386,  388,  389,  391,  393,  394,  407, 
408,  409,  416,  427,  429,  445,  447, 
456,  457,  461,  462,  464,  501,  511, 
519,  520,  531,  535,  552,  562,  565, 
567,  570,  572,  574,  578,  581,  584, 
586,  587,  589,  591,  596,  621,  622, 
625,  628-632,  654,  655,  658,  665,  668, 

675,  677,  689,  691,  699,  707,  712, 
712A,  716,  719,  723,  724,  747,  756, 
766,  773,  783A,  791,  796,  797,  798, 
801,  803A,  807,  820,  821,  860,  861, 
862,  865,  879,  880,  881,  882,  883, 
897,  900,  901,  907,  908,  911,  913, 
914,  915,  948,  958,  962,  979,  985, 
986,  1006,  1025,  1029,  1032,  1057,  1058, 
1059,  1063,  1066,  1069 

Kentucky.  Department  of  Economic  De- 
velopment  128 

Kentucky.  Legislative  Research  Commis- 
sion 429 

Kentucky  Legislator  173 A 

Kentucky  Mountain  Holiness  Association 
461,   462 

Kenworthy,  Wilmer  E.  430 

Kephart,  Horace  27 

Kernodle,  Wayne  28 

Ketron,  Joseph  657 

Keys,  Robert  K.  702 

Keys,  William  G.  1018 

Kidd,  Paul  E.  129 

Kilbourne,  Richard   863 

Killian,  Lewis  M.  279,  280,  281 

Kinard,  J.  D.  809 

Kincaid,   Robert   L.   1019 

King,  Howard  M.  680 

King,  James  B.  346 

Kingsley  Seminary  657 

Kingsport,    Tennessee    63,    74,    174,    210, 

676,  717,   754,   786,    1022 
Kirkland,  Edwin  C.  929 


98 


Knicely,  Howard  307 

Knight,  Mazie  M.  579 

Knott    County,    Kentucky,    144,    171,    215, 

501,  658,  773,  820,  857,  861,  883 
Knox  County,  Kentucky   173 
Knox  County,  Tennessee   179,   194,   585A, 

61 3A,   707A,   725,    1031 
Koch,  Lucian  661 
Kollmorgen,  W.  M.  492,  493,  494 
Konnarock  Training  School  660,  674 
Korson,  George  G.  396,  431 
Krebs,  Frank'  }.   1004A 
Krcchniak,   Helen  B.   1020 


Labor  education  771 

Labor  force  See  Employment 

Labor    relations    356-381,    414,    418,    432, 

433,  1002,  1004A 
Ladd,  Robert  A.  580 
Lagrone,  W.  V.  811 
Laing,  James  T.  308,  309 
Lambert,  Dean  W.   1020A 
Lambert,  Robert  S.   1021 
Lancaster,  J.  L.  810 
Lancaster,  John  L.  130 
Land  classification  &  use  796,  798,  801  A, 

802,   816,   818,   820,   824-840,  853,  871 
Lane,  Billy  J.  510 
Lane,  Winthrop   D.  369 
Lanham,  B.  F.  811 
Lanman,  Charles  29 
Larson,  O.  F.  310 

Laurel  County,  Kentucky  337,  591,  796 
Lawless,  Ray  M.  873 
Lawrence  County,  Kentucky  570,  913 
Lay,  Elery   1022 
Leadership  68,  152,  1035 
Lebanon,  Virginia  155 
Lebus,  William  F.  416 
Ledbetter,  Margaret  459 
Lee,  Jennie  370 
Lee  County,  Virginia   115 
Leeder,  Joseph   947 
Lemert,   Benjamin    1023 
Lemons,  James  812 
Lenski,   Lois   720 
Lentz,  Fred  W.  534 
Leslie  County,   Kentucky    171,  249A,  262, 

407 
Letcher  County,  Kentucky  55,  501,  589 
Levin,    Melvin    R.    22B 
Lewis,  Charles  1).  864 
Lewis,  Claudia   204,   641 
Lewis,  Ruth   1024 
Lewis  County,  West  Virginia  780 
Lexington,    Kentucky   265,   266,   269,   276, 

277 
Leybourne,  G.  C.  282 
Libraries  710-728,  1036.  1043 
Libraries,  school  599,   718,  722,   726,   727 
Lilienthal,  David  E.  1026 


Lincoln  Memorial  University  651,  670, 
673,  673A 

Lindsey,  Quenton  W.  813 

Linger,  Margaret  V.  131 

Linkinogger,  Jessie  V.  757 

Linton,   Ron   M.   371 

Liquor  problem  See  Moonshining;  tem- 
perance 

Literature  986,  987,  993,  1004,  1005,  1024, 
1030,  1040,  1064 

Little,  Arthur  D.  132 

Livesay,  Glenn  O.  551 

Livestock  industry  &  trade  794,  803A,  808 

Livingston,  William  J.  397 

Lloyd,  Alice  655 

Local  government  169-181,  333,  427,  1031 

Lockard,  E.  Kidd  1027 

Logan  County,  West  Virginia  164,  341, 
342,  397,  582,  884A. 

London,  Martha  A.  608 

Long,  E.  J.  814 

Lookabill,  Robert  E.   1028 

Loomis,  Charles  P.  134 

I^oudoun  County,  Virginia   836 

Lowe,  Cornelia  721 

Luebke,  B.  H.  133,  311 

Lumber  industry  See  Forestry  and  forest 
products 

Lutherans  439 

Lynn,  Denise  D.  662 

M 

McAllister,   James    G.    460 

McCartney,  J.  A.   828,  830 

MacClintock,  S.   1029 

McClure,  James  815 

McClure,  Virginia  G.  31 

McComb,  Thomas  M.  1031 

McConnell,  Lela  461,  462 

McCormick,  Kyle  371A 

McCoy,  Homer  C.   1032 

McCoy,  Lottie  581 

McCreary  County,  Kentucky  908 

McCulloch,  Jack  P.  703 

McDade,  Frank  E.  582 

McDonald,  Lois   1033,   1034 

McDowell,  Flora  L.  889 

McDowell     County,    West    Virginia     164, 

351,  399,  514,  573 
McElroy,  Don  D.  758 
McGill,  Nettie  P.  347 
McGoldrick,  Joseph  372 
McKinney,  Lavonia  759 
McKinney,  Zeyland  681 
MeLeod,  John  A.   1030 
McMinn  Countv,  Tennessee  507,  518,  585, 

752,  780A,  856 
Macon  County,   North  Carolina  817,   843 
Madison  County,  Virginia   1008 
Magoffin   County,  Kentucky  99,   134,   183, 

298,  562 
Malone,  Howard  D.  583 


99 


Maloney,  Forrest  B.  816 
Malungeons  482,  500 
Mangrum,  Claude  T.   312 
Marine,  Jack  223 
Marion,  Leonard  M.  759A 

Marion  County,  Alabama  811 

Marion  County,  West  Virginia  234,  575 

Marja,  Fern  398 

Marketing  794,  803A,  804,  808 

Marschner,  Francis  J.  32,  313 

Marsh,  C.   P.  314 

Marshall  County,  Alabama  607,  959 

Martin,  Arlee  609 

Martin,  Isaac  463 

Martin,  Joe  A.  856 

Martin,  Lee  R.  817 

Martin,  Roxie  247 

Maryland    96 

Mason,  Charles  D.  704 

Mason,  John  E.  818 

Mason,  Marie  248,  314 

Mason,  Robert  L.  30,  930 

Mason   County,   West   Virginia   678 

Massie,  William  A.  348 

Masters,  Frank   M.   464 

Mathes,  C.   Hodge  890 

Mathes,   Wileta   760 

Matthews,  Matthew  T.  33 

Matthias,  V.  P.  958 

Mauldin,  W.  P.  315 

Mauney,    Margaret   512 

Maurer,  Beryl  465 

Maurer,  David  W.  958A 

Maxwell,  James  A.  283 

Mayer,  Henry  C.   1035 

Mavnor,  Theodore  R.  610 

Mayo,  S.  C.  135 

Mazzei,  Frank  J.  433 

Medicine  See  Health 

Menefee,  Robert  G.  761 

Mennonites  437 

Mental   health   244.   345,   346,   349,   350A, 
351,  352,  354,  1049 

Merinar,  Elmer  K.  705 

Merrick,  Elliott  71 

Men  ill,  William  M.  416A 

Metal  working  industry   132 

Methodists  477 

Mctzler,  W.  H.  136 

Michigan   264,  267,  268 

Migration   218A,   264-328   See   also   Popu- 
lation;   urbanization 

Miles,  Emma  B.  34 

Miller,  Delmas  F.  682 

Miller,  Donald  V.  762 

Miller,  Harold  W.  349 

Miller,   Helen    1036 

Miller,  Iva  A.  350 

Miller,  L.  F.  871 

Miller,   Nora  205 

Milligan,  Jack  A.  137 

Mills,  Josephine   J.   722 


Mills,  Robert  L.  552 

Mills  See  Textile  industry  &  workers 

Minard,  Ralph  D.  399 

Mingo  County,  West  Virginia   164 

Minnis,  Martha  A.  611 

Missouri   766 

Mitchell,  Carrie  552A 

Mitchell,  Cheophus   H.  612 

Mitchell  County,  North  Carolina  507A 

Mobley,  Joe  L.   138 

Monongahela  Valley  64,  489 

Monongalia   County,    West    Virginia    236, 

355,  426 
Monroe  County,  Tennessee  556,  592 
Montgomery,  Charles  683 
Montgomery,  Ernest  B.  763 
Montgomery,  James  E.  35,  36,  139 
Montgomery  County,  Virginia  116 
Moonlight   schools   734,   741,   767,  775 
Moonshining  1A,  958 A,  994 
Morgan,  Charles  T.  629 
Morgan,   E.   L.   819 
Morgan,  Jesse  W.  553 
Morgan,  Lucy  663 
Morgan,  Rufus  1061 A 
Morgan,  W.  L.  513 
Morgan  County,   Kentucky   134,  298 
Morgan  County,  Tennessee  486,  544,  550, 

784,   876 
Morgantown,  West  Virginia   137,  260,  499 
Morland,  John  K.  1037,  1038 
Morley,  Margaret  37 
Morony,  Ives  G.  373,  432 
Morris,  Homer  L.  336 
Morris,   Thomas   J.   400 
Morse,  Hermann  466 
Mory,  Samuel  A.  337 
Mosby,  Robert  H.  514 
Moss,  J.  J.   316 

"Mountain  Life  &  Work"  1062 
Mountain  View  School  653 
Mowbray,  A.   H.   206 
Mover,  Egbert  684 
Mullikan,    Trumas   S.   554 
Murphy,   R.   E.   401 
Murray,  Lena   See  Ella  Enslow 
Music    &    musical    instruments    227,    911. 

916-949 
Musick,  Ruth  A.  891,  892,  893,  894,  895, 

896,  931 
Myers,  Grace  F.  468,  1039 
Myers,   James   283A 
Myers,  jerry  C.  685 
Myers,  Will   S.   140 

N 

Nadler,  Harry  865 

Names  992,   1050,   1051 

Nashville    Agricultural    Normal    Institute 

650 
National  Student  League  361 


100 


National  Committee  for  the  Defense  of 
Political  Prisoners  374 

Negroes  103,  234,  239,  259,  392,  402, 
1  481,  483,  484,  490,  497,  499,  597-615, 
See  also   Race  relations 

Neil,  Fred  538 

Neskang,  S.  R.  495,  496 

Nestmann,  Ralph  H.  350A 

Neville,  Linda  998 

New  Hill,  West  Virginia  385 

New  River  165 

Newhouse,  Joseph  417 

Newspapers  359,  959,   1018,   1063 

Nicely,  Billy   K.  514A 

Nicholas  County,  West  Virginia  840,  871 

Nichols,  Earl  554A 

Nicholls,  W.  D.  791,  796,  820,  821 

Nicholls,  William  H.  141,  141A,  142,  822, 
823 

Nicks,  Roy  S.    174 

Nicola,   Blanche  249 

Niebuhr,   Reinhold   375 

Niles,  John  S.  932,  933,  934 

Nixon,   Herman  C.  37A,  38 

North  Carolina  37,  59,  84,  101,  134, 
135,  143,  148,  151,  169,  184,  199, 
245,  252,  298,  312,  438,  459,  470, 
473,  475,  487,  488,  490,  490A,  512, 
530,  534,  539,  541,  559.  577,  595, 
600,  605,  608.  615,  644-648,  652,  653, 
663,  669,  681,  686,  700,  720,  737, 
741,  815,  817,  818,  843,  866,  887, 
909,  955,  963,  964,  975,  978,  1021, 
1040A,    1061 

North  Carolina.  Department  of  Conserva- 
tion 866 

Northrup,  Herbert  R.  402 

Norton,  Egbert  584 

Noss,  Marie  G.  435 

Nurses  See  Frontier  Nursing  Service 

Nutrition  230,  234,  236,  238,  242,  251, 
257,  260,  355 


O 

Obenhaus,  Victor  664 

Oconaluftee  Valley   1021 

Oconee  County,  South  Carolina   167,  571 

Odum,  Howard  W.  39 

Ogle,  Milton   143 

Ohio  302  See  also  Cincinnati 

Ohio  River  Valley  978 

Olmstead,  Paul  469 

Oneida  Institute  980 

Ormond,  Jesse  M.  470 

Orr,  Thomas  B.  764 

Osborne,  James  T.   686 

Overton   County,   Tennessee   62,   326,   743 

Owen,  Pauline  706 

Owens,  Bess  A.  935 

Owsley  County,  Kentucky  574 

Oyler,   Merton   141,   317,  318,  319 


Packhorse  libraries  See  Libraries 

Page,  A.  A.  <i<i."> 

Paint  Creek,  West  Virginia  364 

Pantalone,   Margaret   884A 

Park,  Foster  1040 

Parker,  Ruth  L.  403 

Parks  See  Recreation;  names  of  indi- 
vidual  parks 

Parks,  James  R.  471 

Parman,  Guy  D.  824 

Parris,  John  A.  1040A 

Parris,  Wendall  A.  641 A 

Parrish,  Earl  L.  825 

Part-time  farming  801 

Patrick  County,  Virginia  80 

Patteson,  G.  W.  826-839 

Patton,  Catherine  497 

Paulding  County,  Georgia  177 

Pearce,  Albert   338 

Pearsall,  Marion  40,  249A 

Peattie,  Roderick  41 

Peck,  Elizabeth   630 

Peck,  Millard  840,  841 

Pendleton  County,  West  Virginia  150 

Penland  School  663 

Pensions,  94  419,  422 

Pentecostal  churches  440,  479  See  also 
Holiness   churches 

Perdue,  Mabel  J.  765 

Perry  County,  Kentucky  171,  861,  883 

Perry,   V    F.    375A 

Peterson,    M.   J.   809 

Pettigrew,  Thomas  F.  766 

Pettit,  Katherine   1001 

Phillips,   C.  D.  803A 

Phillips,  Wendell  B.  666,  667 

Physical  education   601,  758 

Physicians  237 

Pickens  County,  South  Carolina   176,  809 

Pickeral,  J.  J.  145 

Pickett  County,  Tennessee  552A 

Piedmont   College  666,  667 

Pieper,  Mary  G.  472 

Pike   County,   Kentucky   246,   501,   567 

Pikeville  College  665 

Pilot  Knob,  Tennessee  200 

Pine  Mountain,  Kentucky  958 

Pine  Mountain  Settlement  School  668 

Pineville.  Kentucky  363,  375 

Pitcher,  June  D.  320 

Plant  location  See  Industries  &  Indus- 
trialization 

Pleasant  Hill  Academy  664 

Pleasants  County,  West  Virginia  1036 

Pocahontas  County,  West  Virginia   1048 

Politics  See  Local  government 

Polk  Countv,  Georgia  513 

Polk  County,  Tennessee  564,  772A 

Poole,  Ernest  250 

Pope,  Liston  473 


101 


Population   22B,  32,  203,   231,   232,   287- 

328,  342,  814  See  also  Migration 
Porter,  J.  M.  1041,  1042 
Porter,  W.  F.  136,  146,  1048 
Poundstone,   Sally   724 
Powell,  Hannah  J.  767 
Powell   County,   Kentucky    183,  248,   798 
Powers,  Ozelle  S.  585 
Pratt,  C.  W.  585A 
Presbyterians  441,  477 
Press  See  Newspapers 
Price  support  programs   799A 
Principals  692,  694,  695,  704,  705 
Pringle,  Henry  F.  631 
Promotions,  school  757,  763 
Protestant  Episcopal  Church  455 
Proverbs  See  Folklore 
Psychiatric  care  See  Mental  health 
Public  health  See  Health 
Public  relations  See  School  &  community 
Public  schools  See  Education 
Public  welfare  423 
Pulaski  County,  Virginia   117,  802 
Putnam,  John  F.  936 
Putnam  County,  Tennessee  554A 


Q 


Quails,  Daniel  586 
Quarles,   Mary   207 


Rabun  County,  Georgia  61,  89 

Rabun  Industrial  School  671 

Race  relations  280,  392,  399,  499  See  also 

Negroes;    schools,   desegregation 
Radford,  Virginia  116 
Raine,  James  W.  42 
Raines,  Carroll  C.  768 
Rakestraw,  Isaac  K.  613 
Raleigh  County,  West  Virginia   164,  546, 

714,  788 
Ramey,  James  M.  769 
Randolph,  H.  S.  669 
Ratliff,  G.  C.  989 
Ratliff,  Paul  433A 
Ravenswood,  West  Virginia  307 
Ray,  A.  H.  536 
Ray,  Herman  147 

Reading  717,  719,  774,  See  also  Libraries 
Recreation  155A,   182,  197,  210,  211,  395, 

981,  995,  1053A,  1054 
Reece,  W.  T.  937 
Reeves,  John  E.   175 
Reforestation   975 
Reid,  Robert  L.  800 
Relief  See  Public  welfare 
Religion    22,   73,    375,    397,    404,   435-480, 

1039 
Retardation    (school)  See  Promotions 
Reynolds,  James  E.  351 
Reynolds,  Roy  L.  208 
Reynolds,  Ruth  A.  770 


Rhyme,  Edwin    176 

Rice,  Lawrence  K.  587 

Rice,  Sidney  W.  670 

Rich,   Mark  404 

Richardson,  Ethel  P.  937 

Ridenour,  George  L.  588 

Ritchie,  Andrew  J.  671 

Ritchie,  Jean  928,  940,  941 

Roane  County,   Tennessee   152,   558,   580, 

730,  825 
Roane  County,  West  Virginia  895 
Roanoke  County,  Virginia    118,   153 
Roberts,  Leonard   W.  209,   897,  898,  899, 

900,  901 
Roberts,  Lydia  J.  25 
Robertson    County,    Kentucky    289,    318, 

324,  328 
Robinette,  Frank  L.   687 
Rochester,  Anna  374 
Rockbridge  County,  Virginia  82,  827 
Rockcastle  County,   Kentucky  584 
Rogers,  E.  G.  902,  903,  904 
Rogers,  Jack  405 
Rogers,   Katherine  V.   177 
Rolston,  Frances  589 
Romagnoli,  A.  L.  771 
Roper,  Rosalie  210 
Ross,  Charles  R.  973,  1044 
Ross,  Ernest  L.  537 
Ross,  Malcolm  148,  339 
Ross,  W.  D.  352 
Rothrock,  Mary   U.   725 
Rouse,  Elaine,  418 
Rouse,  W.  L.  820 
Rugby,  Tennessee  1014 
Rugs,  965 
Russell    County,    Virginia    119,    154,    848, 

850 
Rutherford   County,  North   Carolina  615, 

700 
Ruttan,  Vernon  W.  842 
Ryland,  Garnett  474 


Saalbach,  W.  F.   1045 

Saint  Clair  County,  Alabama  597 

Salem  College  649 

Sanders  Retta  E.  772 

Save    the    Children    Federation    200,    746, 

1000 
Scarborough,  Dorthy  942 
Schmitt,  Leonard  R.  211 
School  and  community  676-690,  735 
School  attendance  501-516,  603,  604,  610, 

1028 
School  boards  696 
School  buildings  749,  752,  772 
School  bus  transportation  745,  745A,  755, 

768,  772A,  777,  778,  779,  780,  782,  784 
School    discipline    729 
School  enrollment  735A,  741A 


102 


School    finance    545,    546,    547,    551,    552, 

553,  555,  556 
School   libraries  See   Libraries,  school 
School  lunches  738,  746,  765,  799  A 
Schools,    desegregation     751,     755  A,     761, 

766,  976,  997,   1003 
Schwendeman,  J.  R.   149 
Scott,  George   H.  419 
Scott    County,    Tennessee    590,    687,    777, 

876 
Scott  County,  Virginia   120,  710 
Seay,  Maurice  F.  707 
Seeger,   Charles  943 
Segregation    See    Negroes;    race    relations; 

schools,   desegregation 
Sells,  Cecil  O.  772A 
Selznick,  Philip   1046 
Semple,  Ellen  C.  43 
Setters,  Jilson   946 

Sevier  County,  Tennessee  36,  555,  971 
Sexton,  Oswell  S.  590 
Shackelford,  N.   1047 
Shafer,  Holly  M.  515 
Shalett,  Sidney   150 
Sharp,  Cecil  J.  920,  944 
Shea,  John  P.  867 
Shelton,  Farrar  V.  802,  835 
Shelton,   Mary   E.   884A 
Shelton,    Tom   538 
Shenandoah   County,   Virginia   837 
Sheppard,  Muriel  44,  151 
Sherman,  Mandel  45,  212,  224 
Shivaree  876 
Shull,  S.   C.   836,  837 
Singh,   Har   S.    843 

Sizer,  Leonard  M.  213,  321,  1048,  1049 
Sizer,  Miriam   1050,   1051 
Slone,  Alice  H.  773 
Sloop,   Mary   T.   252 
Slotkin,  James  S.  284 
Smelcer,  Buna  555 
Smiley,  David  475 
Smith,  Dick  W.  844 
Smith,  Eldon  D.  285,  322 
Smith,  Elizabeth  V.  613A 
Smith,  Frank  H.  905 
Smith,  J.  Russell  815 
Smith,  Lee  S.    152 
Smith,  Nena  G.  774 
Smith,  Richard  C.    1052 
Smoky    Mountains   See   Great   Smoky 

Mountains 
Smyth  County,  Virginia  121,  660,  838 
Social  security  797 
Social  studies,   teaching   753 
Society  of  Soul  Winners  461 
Soil  erosion  See  Erosion 
Sollenberger,  Richard  T.  214 
Somers,  Gerald  G.  323,  376,  420 
South  Carolina  86,  97,  167,  179,  301,  449, 

554,  571,  708,  709,  733,  735,  809 
Southern  Educational   Board  539 


"Southern  Folklore  Quarterly"  874 

Spaulding,  Arthur  W.  46 

Spau Iding,  Irving  A.   324 

Special  education  731,  733 

Speech  950-962 

Speech   education    743 

Spencer,  Tennessee   181 

Spencer,  West  Virginia  81,  197 

Spero,  Sterling  D.  377 

Spillman,   Claude   O.   846 

Spivak,  John  L.  1053 

Stanberry,  Thomas  W.  707A 

Standard  of  Living  134,  326 

Starr,  Donald  H.  614 

Stevens,   G.   R.   153 

Stewart,  Acie  516 

Stewart,  Cora  W.  775 

Stodtbeck,  Fred  325 

Stonecipher,  E.  E.  776 

Stout,  Ralph  E.  688 

Stovall,   Henry  672A 

Stradley,  William  B.   178,  556 

Strang,   Ruth   689 

Strawberry   industry  804A 

Strip  mining  429 

Strong,  Edna  R.  406 

Strunk,   Flonnie   777 

Stuart,  Jesse  47,  622,  623,  673,  908A 

Stump,  Roy  J.  778 

Sturgis,  Dudley   C.  326 

Sullivan  County,  Tennessee   77,   159,   171, 

471,  532,  560,  657,  680,  726,  732 
Summers  County,  West  Virginia  788 
Superstitions   195,  234,   885,  913   See  also 

Folklore 
Sutherland,    E.    J.    906 
Swain   County,   North   Carolina   541 
Swift,   Kate   105 3 A 
Swiss  485,  486,  491,  495,  49G 
Swope,  Paul  W.  779 


Tadlock,  E.   V.   476 

Talladega   County,   Alabama   239,   603 

Tang,  Anthony  M.  847 

Tate,  Leland  B.   154,   155,  253 

Taylor,  Alva  W.  779A 

Taylor,  James  M.  708 

Taylor,  John  M.  591 

Taylor,  Paul  F.  378 

Taylor,  Vernon  945 

Tazwell  County,  Virginia   122,  604 

Teachers  607,  611,  612,  691-709 

Temperance  1027 

Tennessee  36,  40,  54,  56,  62,  63,  67,  68, 
69,  74,  77,  94,  105,  133,  134,  147, 
152,  159,  163,  174,  178-81,  194,  195, 
200,  206,  208,  210,  211,  225,  226, 
227,  242,  258,  259,  268,  296,  305 A, 
306,  311,  312,  326,  348,  367,  368, 
375A,  415,  423,  424,  439,  463,  165, 
469,    471,    472,    481,    484,    486,    491, 


103 


493,  495,  496,  500,  50OA,  503,  506, 
507,  508,  509,  510,  518.  522,  523, 
525,  529,  532,  533,  536,  537,  538,  542, 
544,  545,  548,  549,  550,  551,  552A, 
554A,  555,  556,  557,  558,  560,  561, 
564,  569,  576,,  579,  580,  583,  585, 
585 A,  588,  590,  592,  594,  598,  601,  609, 
613,  613A,  620,  637-643,  650,  651, 
656,  657,  664,  670,  673,  676,  679, 
680,  684,  686,  687,  688,  697,  701, 
702,  703,  704,  706,  707A,  715,  717, 
718,  722,  725,  725A,  726,  729,  730, 
731,  732,  743,  744,  745,  745A,  749, 
751,  752.  753,  754,  755,  758,  759A, 
760,  763,  768,  770,  772A,  774,  776, 
777,  780A,  781,  782,  784,  785,  786, 
789,  790,  792,  793,  794A,  800,  803, 
805,  806,  808,  812,  814,  816,  824, 
825,  844,  856,  875,  876,  885,  888, 
889,  890,  902,  903,  904,  918,  923, 
929.  930.  956.  961,  971,  990,  994. 
1009,  1010,  1012,  1022,  1031,  1040, 
1060 

Tennessee.  Legislative  Council  725A 

Tennessee  River  13 

Tennessee  State  Planning  Commission 
155  A 

Tennessee  Taxpavers  Association  179,  180 

Tennessee  Valley  88,  141,  141A,  142,  170, 
463,  822,  823,  842,  863,  868,  975,  977, 
991 

Tennessee  Vallev  Authoritv  13,  868,  975, 
977,  984,   1011,   1026,   1046,  1054   1065 

Tennessee  Vallev  Authority.  Bibliography 
1055,  1056 

Textile  industry  &  workers  473,  737,  983, 
1002,  1009A,  1012,  1023.  1033,  1034, 
1037,  1038 

Thomas,  Helen  W.   726 

Thomas,  Jean  48,  49,  907,  946.  947,  1057, 
1058 

Thomas,  Walter  B.  540 

Thomas.  William  R.  1059 

Thomas,  Winburn  T.  642 

Thomasson,  L.  F.  541 

Thompson,   Craig   379 

Thompson,  James  H.  156,  157,  421 

Thompson,  Samuel   H.   1060 

Thornburgh,   Laura   49A 

Tiffany,   E.   L.   254 

Tinkler,  May  C.  959 

Tobacco    799 

Tocca  Experimental  Forest  71 

Toe  River  Valley  44 

Torbert,   E.  N.   803 

Torrey,  Bradford   1061 

Tourist  industry  990 

Tower,  J.  Allen  498 

Town   sites    104 

Towns  County,  Georgia  721,  810 

Toys  964 


Transportation   See   School   bus   transpor- 
tation 
Traphill   Institute  652 
Truancy  See  School  attendance 
Truesdell,  Fred  L.  615 
Tuberculosis  228 
Tug  River  Valley  1032 
Tunley,   Roul    158 
Turner,  Byron  J.  780 
Tuscaloosa   County,  Alabama   505,   599 
Tuskegee  Institute  255 
Tyler  County,  West  Virginia  566,  1036 

U 

Ulmer,  Mary   1061A 

Umbarger,  Catherine  C.  674 

Unemployment  See  Employment 

Union   County,  Georgia  721 

United  Mine  Workers  of  America  402. 
419,  422 

U.S.  Coal  Mines  Administration  353 

U.S.  Congress.  House.  Select  Committee 
to  Investigate  the  Interstate  Migra- 
tion of  Destitute  Citizens  327 

U.S.  Congress.  Senate.  Committee  on  Edu- 
cation and  Labor  380 

U.S.  Congress,  Senate.  Committee  on  In- 
terstate  Commerce    381 

U.S.  Congress.  Senate.  Special  Committee 
on  Unemployment  Problems  (1959) 
50 

U.S.   Department  of  Agriculture  51,  869 

Upper  East  Tennessee  Regional  Planning 
Commission  159 

Urbanization  218A,  264-86,  393,  842  See 
also  Industries  &  industrialization 


Van  Ark,  Carroll  181 

Vance,  Rupert  B.  52 

Vaughn,  Marshall  E.   1062 

Veal,  Cora  T.  592 

Verhoeff,  Mary  340 

Vernon,  J.  J.  848,  849,  850 

Vinson,  Lacy  W.  557 

Virginia  12,  60,  76,  79,  80,  82,  83,  92, 
93,  98,  106-25,  127,  130,  145,  153-55, 
160,  162,  196,  202,  229,  244,  253, 
308,  309,  387,  390,  406,  437,  439, 
446,  474,  521,  593,  604,  611,  660, 
674,  740,  750,  802,  808,  819,  826- 
839,  848,  849,  850.  906,  918,  922, 
1008,  1050,   1051,  1061 

Vocational  Agriculture  See  Agricultural 
education 

Vocational  education  744,  762 

Vocational  guidance  See  Guidance 

Vogel,  John  675 

Votaw,  Albert   N.  286 

W 

Wadleigh.  Francis  R.  329 
Wakefield,  Dan  643 


104 


Walker,  Lewis  M.  161 

Walker,  Zeddie  542 

Walker  County,  Georgia  606 

Wallace,  Donald  908 

Waller,  Eugene  624 

Walters,  R.  N.  625,  1063 

War,  effects  of  287,  303,  310 

Warburton,  Amber  408 

Warren  County,  Virginia  98 

Washington,  Mary  908A 

Washington     (State)   295 

Washington  County,  Tennessee  159,  180, 
242,  510,  532,  538,  701,  732,  763, 
816 

Washington   County,  Virginia   83,    123 

Watauga  County,  North  Carolina  530 

Water  pollution  978.  1047 

Watkins,  F.  C.  1064 

Wayne   County,   Kentucky   596,   900 

Weatherford,  Willis  D.  53,  477 

Weaver,  Emma  974 

Weaver,  Hazel  F.  593 

Weaving  970 

Webb,  George  W.   163,  870 

Webster  County,  West   Virginia   840,   871 

Weir,  Donald  E.  780A 

Weitzell,  E.  C.  851,  871 

Welch,  Frank  J.  852 

Wengert,  Norman  I.  1065 

Weslager,  C.  A.  487 A 

West,  John  F.  909 

West  Virginia  64,  72,  81,  86A,  100,  104, 
129,  131,  132,  136,  137,  146,  150,  156- 
58,  164,  165,  182,  188,  197,  203A, 
213,  231,  234,  236.  238,  260,  307, 
308,  309,  316,  320,  321,  323,  331, 
332,  336,  339,  341,  342,  344,  345, 
346,  347,  349,  350A,  351,  355,  357, 
358,  364,  365,  369,  371  A,  373,  379, 
380,  381,  382,  383,  384,  385,  392, 
395,  397,  398,  399,  400,  401,  404, 
405,  410,  412,  421,  426,  432,  433, 
451,  485,  489,  497,  499,  514,  515, 
516,  524,  543,  546,  553,  566,  568, 
573,  575,  582,  649,  677,  678,  682, 
683,  690,  692,  693,  695,  696,  705, 
713,  714,  738,  755A,  757,  764,  765, 
769,  771,  772,  778,  779,  780,  783, 
788,  808,  840,  841,  851,  853,  871, 
881  A,  884A,  886,  891,  892,  893,  894, 
895,  896,  910,  931,  1018,  1027,  1032, 
1036,  1043,  1048,  1049 
West  Virginia.  Department  of  Employ- 
ment Security  164 
West    Virginia.    Governor's    Investigating 

Committee  381A 
West   Virginia   Legislative    Interim    Com- 
mittee 543 
West  Virginia  State  College  997 
West  Virginia  State  Federation   of  Labor 

1004A 
Westover,  J.   H.  960 


Wetzel   County,  West   Virginia   886,    1036 

Wharton,  May  C.  256,  1020 

Wheeler,  Jesse  H.  853 

Wheeler,  Lester  R.  54,  225,  226,  227,  257, 

258,  478 
Wheeler,  V.  D.   227 
Wheelwright,  Kentucky  409 
Whisman,  John  D.   1066 
Whitaker,   Fess   55 
Whitaker,  Walter  C.   47S A 
White,  Donald  910 
White,  Edwin  E.  56 
White,  Elizabeth  341 
White,  Thomas  E.  422 
White  County,  Tennessee  504 
Whitley  County,  Kentucky   173 
Whitman,  Robert   H.  259 
Whitman,  Ruth  H.  260 
Widen,  West   Virginia   358,  379,  381A 
Wiesel,  Garl  354 
Wiggins,  Timothy  261 
Wight,  Edward  A.  728 
Wildasin,  Frances  W.  781 
Wilder,   Tennessee  375A 
Wilfong,  Harry  D.  434 
Wilgus,  D.  K.  914,  948 
Wilkes  County,  North  Carolina  559,  605, 

652,  653,  909 
Willeford,  Mary  B.  262 
William,  Ellis  R.  499 
Williams,  Bertha  L.  727 
Williams,  Claude  C.  479 
Williams,  Cratis  911,  912,  913,  960A 
Williams,  Dorcas  A.  355 
Williams,  Drew  B.  782 
Williams,  Faith   215 
Williams,  Frank  B.  594 
Williams,  L.   M.  409 
Williams,  Pearl  D.  558 
Williams,  Robin  M.  328 
Williams,  Stanley  B.  410 
Wilson,  Gordon  949 
Wilson,  Isabella  783 
Wilson,  L.  C.  690 
Wilson,  Louis  R.  728 
Wilson,  Ross  H.  544 
Wilson,  Samuel  T.  57 
Wilson,  Warren  H.  480 
Wise  County,  Virginia  124,  127 
Withington,  Alfreda  58 
Withoft,  Mabel  S.  626 
Witzel,  William  T.  165 
Wolf,  Walter  498 
Wolfe,  Thomas  1064 
Wood,  Gordon  961 
Wood,  Harriette  166,  627 
Wood  County,  West  Virginia   1036 
Woodbridge,  Hensley  C.  914,  962 
Woods,  Roy  C.  1067,  1068 
Woodside,  Robert  E.  595 
Woodson,  Marshall  S.    167 
Woodworking  Industry   132,   149 


105 


Woody,  Robert  H.  59  Y 

ISrV>i  %sr*£s?s-&k  CaroIina  148 

Wrllh!;  SSina  915  V°"'h  CentOT  210'  469  S«  »'»  R<*™"o„ 

Writers'  Project.  Kentucky  168  Z 

Wyoming  County   West  Virginia  164,  516,       Zimmerman,  Carle  C.  217 

053,  jOH,    1U^»  Zumstein    William   C    784 

Wythe  County,  Virginia  82,  125,  839  uuanxan,  William  C.  784 


106 


BULLETIN  OF  THE 

Russell  Sage  Foundation  Library 

NUMBER  115    -    -    OCTOBER,  1932 


THE  SOUTHERN  HIGHLANDER 


PUBLISHED  BI-MONTHLY 
10  Cents  a  Copy  50  Cents  a  Year 

RUSSELL     SAGE     FOUNDATION 


130  East  22d  Street 


New  York 


Entered  as  second'dass  matter  October  24,  1913,  at  the  Post  Office  at  New  York, 
N.  Y.,  under  the  Act  of  August  24,  1912 


THE  SOUTHERN  HIGHLANDER:  A  Selected  Bibliography 

Compiled  by  Mabel  A.  Badcock 

This  brief  bibliography  is  intended  to  supplement  those  references  of  general  interest  included  in  the  Bibliog- 
raphy on  the  Southern  Highlands  compiled  by  Mrs.  Campbell  in  1920,  together  with  those  in  the  bibliography  in 
Mr.  Campbell's  book  "The  Southern  Highlander"  published  a  year  later.  With  the  exception  of  a  few  books  of 
outstanding  value,  an  effort  has  been  made  to  avoid  repetition. 

Thomas,  W.  R.  Life  among  the  hills  and 
mountains  of  Kentucky.  414  p.  Harold,  Ky. 
Sandy  Valley  pub.  co.  1926. 

The  Author  "born  under  the  brow  of  the  great 
Cumberland  mountains  of  the  Eastern  highlands  of 
Kentucky"  describes  briefly  the  forty  counties  included 
in  his  regional  study.  The  book  is  dedicated  to  the 
mountain  folks  of  Kentucky. 

Thompson,  S.  H.  Highlanders  of  the 
South.  86  p.  N.  Y.  Methodist  book  con- 
cern, 1910. 

Written  from  the  missionary's  standpoint. 

Wentworth,  F.  B.  Strange  people;  weird 
customs  and  curious  habits  of  the  Kentucky 
mountaineers.  53  p.  Winchester,  Ky.  The 
Author,  n.  d. 

PERIODICALS 

Mountain  life  and  work,  published  by 
Conference  of  Southern  mountain  workers  at 
Berea  College,  Berea,  Ky.  "in  the  interest  of 
fellowship  and  mutual  understanding  between 
the  Appalachian  Mountains  and  the  rest  of 
the  nation." 

It  has  been  impossible  in  as  brief  a  list  to  single  out 
articles  from  this  valuable  magazine  and  it  is  therefore 
hoped  that  this  general  note  will  convey  the  measure 
of  its  significance. 

Calkins,  M.  C.  Friends  Creek.  (in 
Survey,    v.  47,  p.  845-50,  February  25,  1922) 

A  "First-hand"  account  illustrative  of  the  work 
carried  on  by  two  settlement  workers  who  were  trans- 
planted from  New  York  City  to  a  small  community  in 
the  Southern  highlands. 

Carter,  I.  G.  Mountain  white  folk-lore: 
tales  from  the  southern  Blue  Ridge,  (in  Jour, 
of  American  folk-lore.  v.  38,  p.  340-74, 
June  1925) 

Author  claims  that  while  the  collection  of  Blue  Ridge 
mountain  ballads  has  gone  steadily  on  there  has  been 
little  done  about  the  collection  of  old  folk  tales.  She 
has  therefore  presented  a  number  here. 

Combs,  J.  Language  of  the  Southern 
highlanders.  (in  Publications  of  Modern 
language  assn.  v.  46,  p.  1302-22,  December 
1931) 

The  Author  of  this  graphic  article  is  himself  a 
"Kentucky  highlander"  and  heard  many  of  the 
illustrative  phrases  he  uses  in  childhood. 

Davis,  D.  H.  Changing  role  of  the 
Kentucky  mountains  and  the  passing  of  the 
Kentucky  mountaineer,  (in  Jour,  of  geog- 
raphy,   v.  24,  p.  41-52,  February  1925) 

Article  is  fully  illustrated. 

Study  of  the  succession  of  human 


BIBLIOGRAPHIES 
Russell    Sage    foundation.      Library. 

The  Southern  highlands,  comp.  by  Mrs.  O.  D. 
Campbell.    (Library  bulletin  no.  39,  1920) 

United   States.     Library   of   congress. 

List  of  references  on  the  mountain  whites. 
13  p.  (typewritten)  1922. 

GENERAL 

Campbell,  J.  C.  Southern  highlander 
and  his  homeland.  405  p.  N.  Y.  Russell 
Sage  foundation,  1921. 

Bibliography,  p.  375-89. 

Campbell,  Mrs.  O.  D.  and  Sharp,  C.  J. 

English  folk  songs  from  the  Southern  Appa- 
lachians; comprising  122  songs  and  ballads, 
and  323  tunes.    341  p.    N.  Y.    Putnam,  1917. 

Lack  of  space  prevents  the  inclusion  of  many  of  the 
other  excellent  collections  of  mountain  songs  and 
ballads.  The  Russell  Sage  foundation  library  will, 
however,  be  glad  to  send  a  list  of  such  collections  to 
any  one  desiring  it. 

Cobb,  A.  C.  Kinfolks,  Kentucky  moun- 
tain rhymes.    82  p.    Boston,  Houghton,  1922. 

Furman,  Lucy.     Quare  women;    a  story 

of  the  Kentucky  mountains.    219  p.    Boston, 

Atlantic  monthly  press,  1923. 

Describes  in  fiction  form  the  work  of  the  Hindman 
Settlement  School  among  the  Kentucky  mountaineers. 
The  story  is  continued  in  the  author's  later  book 
"Glass  Windows;  a  story  of  the  quare  women," 
published  by  Little,  Brown  of  Boston  in  1925. 

Goodrich,    F.    L.     Mountain    homespun. 

91  p.    New  Haven,  Yale  univ.  press,  1931. 

Describes  the  handicrafts  of  the  Southern  mountains 
and  some  of  the  women  engaged  in  them. 

Kephart,  Horace.  Our  Southern  high- 
landers.  New  &  enl.  ed.  N.  Y.  Macmillan, 
1926. 

Raine,  J.  W.  Land  of  saddle-bags;  a 
study  of  the  mountain  people  of  Appalachia. 
260  p.  N.  Y.  Council  of  women  for  home 
missions  and  Missionary  educ.  movement  of 
the  U.  S.  and  Canada,  cl924. 

Randolph,  Vance.  (The)  Ozarks;  an 
American  survival  of  primitive  society.  310 
p.    N.  Y.    Vanguard  press,  1931. 

Southern  mountain  workers  confer- 
ence. Condensed  report  of  the  Conference, 
Knoxville,  Tennessee,  April  23,  1914.  20  p. 
Knoxville,  The  Conference,  1914. 

Since  the  publication  of  the  periodical,  Mountain 
life  and  work  in  April  1925,  the  second  number  of  each 
volume  has  contained  the  Papers  of  the  Annual  confer- 
ence of  Southern  mountain  workers. 


activities    in    the    Kentucky    mountains,    a 


dissected  highland  area,  (in  Jour,  of  geog- 
raphy,   v.  29,  p.  85-100,  March  1930) 

Deals  briefly  with  the  Kentucky  mountains  from  the 
pre-historic  period  to  the  present  time.  States  that 
"the  stalwart  mountaineer  still  exists  in  fiction,  but  his 
counterpart  in  real  life  is  rare." 

An  excellent  article. 

Duncan,    H.    G.     Southern    highlanders. 

(in   Jour,   of   applied   sociology,      v.    10,    p. 

556-61,  July  1926) 

Descriptive  article  criticizing  the  literature  on  the 
Southern  highlander. 

Duncan,   H.    G.    and   Duncan,   W.   L. 

Superstitions  and  sayings  among  the  Southern 
highlanders.  (in  Jour.  American  folk-lore. 
v.  42,  p.  233-37,  July  1929) 

Harlow,    A.    F.     Frontier   people   of   the 

Appalachians,     (in  Travel,     v.  39,  p.  11-14, 

June  1922) 

A  Fully  illustrated  article  which  is  written  in  a  sym- 
pathetic spirit.  Deals  mainly  with  the  handicrafts  of 
the  mountaineer. 

Hirsch,  N.  D.  M.  Experimental  study  of 
the  East  Kentucky  mountaineers;  a  study  in 
heredity  and  environment.  (Genetic  psychol- 
ogy monographs,     v.  3,  no.  3,  March  1928) 

After  a  brief  generalization  the  author  proceeds  to 
describe  his  experimental  tests.  Findings  are  sum- 
marized in  a  chapter  entitled — Anthropological  and 
sociological  data.  "The  Future  of  the  East  Kentucky 
Mountaineer,"  closes  the  article. 

Hitch,  M.  A.  Life  in  a  Blue  Ridge  Hol- 
low, (in  Jour,  of  geography,  v.  30,  p.  309-22, 
November  1931) 

The  "Hollow"  described  in  this  article  is  part  of  the 
region  which  is  under  consideration  by  the  National 
Park  Commission.  Should  it  be  taken  over  for  a 
Federal  park  it  will  seriously  affect  the  mountaineers 
who  find  it  difficult  to  live  and  work  elsewhere.  A  map 
and  illustrations  are  included. 

Holliday,  G.  Singing  games  of  the  South- 
ern mountains,  (in  Overland  and  Out  west, 
n.  s.    v.  89,  p.  9+     December  1931) 

Niles,  J.  J.  In  defense  of  the  backwoods; 
mountaineer  folk-songs,  (in  Scribner's  maga- 
zine,    v.  83,  p.  738-45,  June  1928) 

A  Collection  of  songs  interspersed  with  short  narra- 
tives by  one  who  came  from  the  backwoods. 

White    pioneers   and    black,      (in 

Musical  quar.    v.  18,  p.  60-75,  January  1932) 

An  Interesting  comparison  of  the  music  of  the 
Southern  mountaineer  and  the  Negro,  historically 
presented. 

Porter,   L.   S.     In  search  of  local  color. 

(in  Harper's  magazine,     v.    145,  p.   281-94, 

451-66,  August-September  1922) 

An  Illustrated  story  of  the  Kentucky  mountains 
told  by  a  young  writer. 

Sherman,  M.  Environment  and  mental 
development;  a  study  of  an  isolated  com- 
munity, (in  Jour,  of  the  American  assn.  of 
university  women,  v.  23,  p.  137-140,  April 
1930) 

"A  Preliminary  psychological  survey  of  an  isolated 
community  in  Virginia  consisting  of  a  group  of  families 
living  in  a  hollow  of  the  Shenandoah  Valley." 


Sutherland,  E.  J.  Changing  Southern 
mountaineer;  from  a  native  mountaineer's 
standpoint,  (in  Virginia  jour,  of  education, 
v.  24,  p.  72-75,  October  1930) 

Thornborough,  Laura.  Americans  the 
20th  century  forgot;  a  visit  to  our  contempo- 
rary ancestors  in  the  Great  Smokies — Cus- 
toms surviving  from  the  Elizabethan  age — 
the  result  of  centuries  of  isolation,  rllustrated. 
(in  Travel,    v.  50,  p.  25-28,  April  1928) 

Ulmann,  Mrs.  Doris.  Mountaineers  of 
Kentucky;  a  series  of  portrait  studies,  (in 
Scribner's  magazine,  v.  83,  p.  675-81,  June 
1928) 

Six  beautiful  photographs  of  typical  mountaineers. 

Wheeler,  L.  R.     The  Intelligence  of  East 

Tennessee   mountain  children,     (in  Jour,  of 

educ.   psychology,     v.   23,   p.   351-70,   May 

1932) 

Describes  the  results  of  various  tests  and  compares 
the  Tennessee  mountain  children  with  those  of  Ken- 
tucky, also  with  the  children  tested  in  rural,  city  and 
general  population  of  Illinois.  Dwells  upon  the  earlier 
article  of  N.  D.  M.  Hirsch. 

BIOGRAPHY 
Byers,  Tracy.     Martha  Berry,  the  Sunday 
lady  of  Possum  Trot.   268  p.   N.  Y.   Putnam, 
1932. 

Interesting  account  of  the  life  and  work  of  the 
founder  of  the  Mount  Berry  School. 

Cowan,    S.    K.     Sergeant   York  and    his 

people.   292  p.   N.Y.  Funk&  Wagnalls,  1922. 

Valuable  as  showing  one  mountaineer's  accomplish- 
ment in  the  face  of  emergency. 

Periodicals 

Eastman,  Fred.  Artist  in  religion;  wel- 
fare activities  of  Frances  Goodrich.  (in 
Christian  Century,  v.  47,  p.  963-64,  August 
6,  1930) 

Tells  of  Frances  Goodrich's  determination  to  give  up 
her  own  career  tor  the  work  in  the  Southern  mountains. 

Gavit,  J.  P.     Boot  strapping  among  the 

pioneers,      (in   Survey,      v.    68,    p.    304-306, 

July  1,  1932) 

A  Brief  tale  of  one.  James  G.  K.  McClure,  who  went 
to  North  Carolina  for  health  and  stayed  to  help. 

Reed,  L.  E.  My  little  learning;  a  frag- 
ment of  autobiographv.  (in  Atlantic  monthly. 
v.  135,  p.  749-54,  June  1925) 

The  Experience  of  a  young  Southern  mountaineer 
who  leaves  the  place  of  his  birth  but  ultimately  returns 
to  take  up  work  there. 

Withington,  Alfreda.  The  Mountain 
doctor,  (in  Atlantic  monthly,  v.  150,  p. 
257-67,  September  1932) 

Editor's  note — After  many  years  of  private  practi6e. 
Dr.  Vv'ithington  enlisted  as  a  surgeon  in  the  Red  Cross. 
When,  after  the  Armistice,  the  completion  of  her  work 
in  France  brought  her  home,  she  sought  in  the  remote 
undoctored  wilds  of  the  Kentucky  mountains  an  oppor- 
tunity for  service  not  dissimilar,  in  spirit  at  least,  to 
her  work  at  the  front. 

Continued  in  the  October  issue.  Final  episodes  to 
be  given  in  the  December  number. 


EDUCATION 

Hatcher,  O.  L.  ed.  (A)  Mountain  school; 
a  study  made  by  the  Southern  woman's  edu- 
cational alliance  and  Konnarock  training 
school.  248  p.  Richmond,  Va.  Garrett  & 
Massie,  inc.  cl°30. 

Southern  mountain  schools  maintained  by 
denominational  and  independent  agencies. 
Rev.  ed.    N.  Y.  Russell  Sage  foundation,  1929. 

Stewart,  Mrs.  C.  W.  Moonlight  schools 
for  the  emancipation  of  adult  illiterates. 
194  p.    N.  Y.  Dutton,  cl922. 

Waller,  E.  C.  Survey  of  the  church  and 
independent  schools  and  colleges  of  the 
Southern  Appalachians;  a  thesis  submitted 
to  the  Graduate  committee  of  the  University 
of  Tennessee.  98  p.  (mimeographed)  Knox- 
ville,  The  Author,  1931. 

Bibliography,  p.  96.  Appendix — List  of  schools 
arranged  under  State,  p.  97. 

Periodicals 

Alderman,  L.  R.  Buncombe  county's 
excellent  work  for  adult  illiterates,  (in  School 
life.    v.  12,  p.  176-79,  May  1927) 

Describes  the  devoted  work  of  Mrs.  Elizabeth 
Morris.  Expresses  surprise  at  the  ease  with  which  the 
adult  illiterate  learns. 

Benschaten,  J.  R.  Just  to  read  and 
write!  (in  World's  work.  v.  59,  p.  77-80, 
December  1930) 

Describes  the  work  initiated  by  Cora  Wilson  Stewart 
and  its  follow-up  to-day. 

Campbell,  Mrs.  O.  D.  I  sing  behind  the 
plough,  (in  Jour,  of  adult  education  (Amer- 
ican), v.  2,  p.  248-59,  June  1930) 

A  Searching  inquiry  into  the  educational  effort  now 
being  carried  on  in  the  Southern  highlands.  This 
article  also  distributed  by  the  John  C.  Campbell  folk 
school,  Brasstown.  N.  C. 

Clinkscales,  J.  G.  Story  of  a  determined 
doctor,  (in  Methodist  quar.  rev.  v.  77,  p. 
44M-60,  July  1928) 

Tells  of  a  mountain  doctor  who  having  sought  and 
found  a  cultural  education  in  his  mature  years,  returned 
to  his  people  and  strove  to  improve  their  educational 
opportunities. 

Miller,  D.  W.  Vocational  education  in 
the  Southern  mountains.  (in  Education, 
v.  50,  p.  429-31,  March  1930) 

A  Criticism  of  the  vocational  education  now  carried 
or.  in  the  Southern  highlands  and  a  plea  for  its  improve- 
ment. 

Ridgway,  F.  H.  Kentucky  experiment 
in  reading.  (in  Library  jour.  v.  50,  p. 
954-56,  November  15,  1926) 

A  Staff  member  of  the  Berea  College  Library  des- 
cribes the  experimental  work  of  the  Book  Wagon  among 
the  mountaineers  of  Kentucky  and  the  gradual  devel- 
opment of  a  resolve  to  concentrate  on  work  with  the 
mountain  children. 

Weldon,  Beulah.  Foot  hills  (illustrated), 
(in  Survey,    v.  58,  p.  40-42,  April  1,  1927) 

"The  First  prize  story  in  the  third  quarterly  Harmon 
Survey  Award  in  the  field  of  public  education." 


HEALTH 

Committee  on  the  costs  of  medical  care. 
Frontier  nursing  service,  by  Anne  Wilson. 
16  p.  Wash.  D.  C.  the  Committee,  1932. 
(Miscellaneous  contributions,  no.  10) 

Frontier  nursing  service,  Lexington,  Ky. 
Quarterly  bulletin. 

Gardner,  Mrs.  Caroline.  Clever  country; 
Kentucky  mountain  trails.  159  p.  N.  Y. 
Revell,  1931. 

Describes  the  work  of  the  Frontier  nursing  service. 

Poole,     Ernest.     Nurses    on    horseback. 

168  p.    N.  Y.  Macmillan,  1932. 

Another  vivid  account  of  the  work  of  the  Frontier 
Nursing  Service,  including  a  detailed  sketch  of  the  life 
of  its  founder,  Mary  Breckinridge.  The  illustrations 
have  the  charm  of  original  snap  shots. 

United    States.       Children's    bureau. 

Publications: 
no.  110,  Nutrition  and  care  of  children  in 

a  mountain  county  of  Kentucky, 

by  Lydia  Roberts.    1922. 
no.  120,  Maternity  and   infant   care   in   a 

mountain   county  in  Georgia,  by 

Glenn  Steele.    1923. 

Periodicals 

Bradley,  F.  S.   Redemption  of  Appalachia. 

(in  Hygeia.    v.  9,  p.  26-30,  January  1931) 

Describes  early  days  of  Berea  College  during  an 
epidemic  and  the  consequent  reactions  among  the 
mountaineers  whose  daughters  were  attending  school. 

Breckinridge,  Mary.  Is  birth  control 
the  answer?  (in  Harper's  magazine,  v.  163, 
p.  157-63,  July  1931) 

The  Author,  founder  of  the  Frontier  nursing  service, 
believes  not.  A  frank  discussion  of  the  question  as  it 
affects  the  Southern  mountaineer. 

Cunningham,  A.  E.  Word  from  old 
Kentucky,  (in  Public  health  nurse,  v.  14, 
p.  535-36,  October  1922) 

This  nurse,  as  author,  tells  of  her  varied  job  which 
covers  several  small  towns  in  addition  to  rural  districts. 
Brief  but  to  the  point. 

Fell,  Frances.  A  Christmas  "least-one" 
on  Hell-fer-Sartin.  (in  Public  health  nurse. 
v.  22,  p.  605-606, December  1930) 

Describes  the  arrival  of  a  Christmas  baby,  cared  for 
by  the  Frontier  nursing  service. 

Other  articles  describing  the  work  of  the  Service 
may  be  found  in  various  issues  of  this  periodical. 

McBrayer,    L.    B.    and    Dansdill,    T. 

Health  project  on  yon  side  of  the  mountain, 
(in  Hygeia.    v.  4,  p.  7-10,  January  1926) 

How  health  rules  were  taught  to  a  group  of  North 
Carolina  mountaineers  thro  the  enthusiasm  and  good 
will  of  the  local  teacher. 

Solenberger,  E.  R.  Nurses  on  horseback; 
Frontier  nursing  service,  (in  Hygeia.  v.  9, 
p.  633-38,  July  1931) 

Same  cond.  Amer.  jour,  of  pub.  health,  v.  21,  p. 
953-4.  August  1931. 

An  Illustrated  article  giving  a  brief  history  of  the 
Frontier  Nursing  Service  and  describing  the  natural 
dangers  surmounted  by  its  nurses.